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. 2008 Aug;15(2):79-89.
doi: 10.1016/j.pathophys.2008.04.007. Epub 2008 Jun 20.

Obesity and vascular dysfunction

Affiliations

Obesity and vascular dysfunction

Phoebe A Stapleton et al. Pathophysiology. 2008 Aug.

Abstract

One of the most profound challenges facing public health and public health policy in Western society is the increased incidence and prevalence of both overweight and obesity. While this condition can have significant consequences for patient mortality and quality of life, it can be further exacerbated as overweight/obesity can be a powerful stimulus for the development of additional risk factors for a negative cardiovascular outcome, including increased insulin resistance, dyslipidemia and hypertension. This manuscript will present the effects of systemic obesity on broad issues of vascular function in both afflicted human populations and in the most relevant animal models. Among the topics that will be covered are alterations to vascular reactivity (both dilator and constrictor responses), adaptations in microvascular network and vessel wall structure, and alterations to the patterns of tissue/organ perfusion as a result of the progression of the obese condition. Additionally, special attention will be paid to the contribution of chronic inflammation as a contributor to alterations in vascular function, as well as the role of perivascular adipose tissue in terms of impacting vessel behavior. When taken together, it is clearly apparent that the development of the obese condition can have profound, and frequently difficult to predict, impacts on integrated vascular function. Much of this complexity appears to have its basis in the extent to which other co-morbidities associated with obesity (e.g., insulin resistance) are present and exert contributing effects.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A schematic representation of adipose tissue depositions, the adipokines, inflammatory markers and other factors that are released from these tissues, and their identified impact on elements of vascular function. Pointed arrows indicate potentiating effects on vascular outcome, while flat headed arrows indicate inhibitory effects on vascular outcome.

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