The Molecular and Cellular Basis of Cardiovascular Disease
A special issue of Cells (ISSN 2073-4409). This special issue belongs to the section "Cellular Pathology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 December 2020) | Viewed by 95677
Special Issue Editors
Interests: myocardial infarction; cardiac hypertrophy; cardiac remodeling; regeneration; Wnt signaling; fibroblast biology; ligand–receptor interactions
Interests: hypertension; cerebral circulation; cerebral small vessel disease; vascular dementia; blood brain barrier; endothelial biology; microglia; Wnt signaling
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Cardiovascular diseases encompass a diverse collection of conditions affecting heart and blood vessels. The vast majority of these diseases are idiopathic, meaning that the responsible cellular and molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. This is reflected by the therapeutics that are currently available, primarily targeting symptoms rather than the underlying causes of the disease. A major problem in this context is that cardiovascular diseases are diagnosed by their symptoms, such as ‘high blood pressure’ or ‘reduced cardiac output’, rather than by the underlying molecular defect, as is increasingly more common in, e.g., cancer. This results in a rather empirical therapeutic approach where long-term symptomatic treatment is combined with general lifestyle advice (care). Instead, a much more desirable approach would be an effective correction of the molecular defects that cause the symptoms (cure), obviating the need for life-long drug use in the affected patients.
From these observations, it is clear that in order to take the next step in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases we need a better understanding of the pathological mechanisms underlying these conditions. To achieve this, we will be helped by recent advances in our understanding of molecular mechanisms involved in cell proliferation and differentiation, such as growth factors, cytokines, and hormones, but also epigenetic factors such as DNA methylation and micro-RNAs. The purpose of this Special Issue of Cells is to provide the reader with a collection of articles addressing the molecular and cellular basis of a variety of cardiovascular diseases. This is an essential step in the transition of the treatment of cardiovascular diseases from symptom reduction to addressing causative molecular and cellular defects.
Dr. Matthijs Blankesteijn
Dr. Sébastien Foulquier Foulquier
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- atherosclerosis
- vascular biology
- calcification
- myocardial infarction
- cardiac hypertrophy
- heart failure
- tissue regeneration
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