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Metabolomics of Arterial Stiffness

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo12050370

Keywords

arterial stiffness; vascular ageing; pulse wave analysis; pulse wave velocity; metabolomics; metabolism; cardiovascular risk

Funding

  1. Estonian Research Council [1054, 1437, 435]

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Arterial stiffness is an early detectable sign of vascular wall alterations and is an independent predictor of cardiovascular events and death. Metabolomics can be used to study the metabolic intermediates and products associated with arterial stiffness, providing insights for personalized cardiovascular risk assessment and treatment selection.
Arterial stiffness (AS) is one of the earliest detectable signs of structural and functional alterations of the vessel wall and an independent predictor of cardiovascular events and death. The emerging field of metabolomics can be utilized to detect a wide spectrum of intermediates and products of metabolism in body fluids that can be involved in the pathogenesis of AS. Research over the past decade has reinforced this idea by linking AS to circulating acylcarnitines, glycerophospho-lipids, sphingolipids, and amino acids, among other metabolite species. Some of these metabolites influence AS through traditional cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, diabetes, smoking), while others seem to act independently through both known and unknown pathophysiological mechanisms. We propose the term 'arteriometabolomics' to indicate the research that applies metabolomics methods to study AS. The 'arteriometabolomics' approach has the potential to allow more personalized cardiovascular risk stratification, disease monitoring, and treatment selection. One of its major goals is to uncover the causal metabolic pathways of AS. Such pathways could represent valuable treatment targets in vascular ageing.

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