4.6 Review

Free Radicals and Obesity-Related Chronic Inflammation Contrasted by Antioxidants: A New Perspective in Coronary Artery Disease

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo13060712

Keywords

metabolic syndrome; antioxidants; free radicals; coronary atherosclerosis; oxidized LDL; toxicity

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We are exposed to increasing levels of free radicals (FR) due to the widespread usage of man-made chemicals, drugs, smoking, processed foods, and various pollutants. These factors, along with obesity and metabolic syndrome, can cause endothelial damage and inflammation. Antioxidants play a crucial role in repairing this damage and preventing atherosclerosis, particularly at the coronary level.
We are surrounded by factors called free radicals (FR), which attach to the molecules our body is made of, first among them the endothelium. Even though FR are to a certain extent a normal factor, nowadays we face an escalating increase in these biologically aggressive molecules. The escalating formation of FR is linked to the increased usage of man-made chemicals for personal care (toothpaste, shampoo, bubble bath, etc.), domestic laundry and dish-washer detergents, and also an ever wider usage of drugs (both prescription and over the counter), especially if they are to be used long-term (years). In addition, tobacco smoking, processed foods, pesticides, various chronic infectious microbes, nutritional deficiencies, lack of sun exposure, and, finally, with a markedly increasing impact, electromagnetic pollution (a terribly destructive factor), can increase the risk of cancer, as well as endothelial dysfunction, owing to the increased production of FR that they cause. All these factors create endothelial damage, but the organism may be able to repair such damage thanks to the intervention of the immune system supported by antioxidants. However, one other factor can perpetuate the state of inflammation, namely obesity and metabolic syndrome with associated hyperinsulinemia. In this review, the role of FR, with a special emphasis on their origin, and of antioxidants, is explored from the perspective of their role in causing atherosclerosis, in particular at the coronary level.

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