AI Article Synopsis

  • The heart is the most energy-intensive organ, and disruptions in its energy metabolism can lead to heart failure (HF), which is a severe stage of heart diseases.
  • The review highlights the need for new therapies targeting metabolic processes, moving beyond traditional treatments that focus on hormone and blood flow regulation.
  • It examines how changes in energy sources and metabolism affect HF progression, and discusses recent pharmacological advancements that may help improve heart function based on new research findings.

Article Abstract

The heart is the most energy-demanding organ throughout the whole body. Perturbations or failure in energy metabolism contributes to heart failure (HF), which represents the advanced stage of various heart diseases. The poor prognosis and huge economic burden associated with HF underscore the high unmet need to explore novel therapies targeting metabolic modulators beyond conventional approaches focused on neurohormonal and hemodynamic regulators. Emerging evidence suggests that alterations in metabolic substrate reliance, metabolic pathways, metabolic by-products, and energy production collectively regulate the occurrence and progression of HF. In this review, we provide an overview of cardiac metabolic remodeling, encompassing the utilization of free fatty acids, glucose metabolism, ketone bodies, and branched-chain amino acids both in the physiological condition and heart failure. Most importantly, the latest advances in pharmacological interventions are discussed as a promising therapeutic approach to restore cardiac function, drawing insights from recent basic research, preclinical and clinical studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12265-023-10443-0DOI Listing

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