Impact of inflammation on vascular disease in hypertension |
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Authors: | Agostino Virdis,Umberto Dell&rsquo AgnelloStefano Taddei |
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Affiliation: | Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy |
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Abstract: | Low grade inflammation exerts a crucial pathogenic role in hypertension and cardiovascular disease. A large body of evidence indicates that innate and adaptive immune systems, and in particular T cells, are involved. A balance between T-effector lymphocytes and Treg lymphocytes represents a crucial regulatory mechanism that, when altered, favours blood pressure elevation and organ damage development. Of note, Treg lymphocytes exert important anti-inflammatory properties, whose activities guarantees vascular homeostasis and protects the vessel wall from the development of atherosclerosis. In humans, most of evidence ascertaining essential hypertension as a condition of chronic low-grade inflammatory status revealed a strict and independent association between CRP, TNF-α, IL-6 or adhesion molecules and vascular changes in essential hypertensive patients. Evidence of involvement of the immune system in vasculature from patients with hypertension or cardiovascular disease starts to appear in literature. |
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Keywords: | Hypertension Inflammation Innate and adaptive immunity Vascular remodelling |
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