Mitochondrial Dysfunction in the Cardiovascular Disease Continuum: Problems of Studying the Progression During the Follow-Up of the Pathologies
Ganna Nevoit, Maksim Potyazhenko, Ozar Mintser, Gediminas Jarusevicius, Alfonsas Vainoras

TL;DR
This paper explores how mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to the progression of cardiovascular diseases and suggests new ways to study and classify it.
Contribution
The paper introduces a conceptual framework for understanding mitochondrial dysfunction across stages of cardiovascular disease progression.
Findings
Mitochondrial dysfunction is a key factor in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases.
Mitochondrial dysfunction varies in characteristics at different stages of cardiovascular disease progression.
Developing objective methods to assess mitochondrial dysfunction is a promising area for future research.
Abstract
This perspective piece extrapolates knowledge of mitochondriology to the clinical aspects of cardiovascular disease (CVDs) development. The aim was to deepen the understanding of the etiopathogenesis of CVDs by conceptualizing the systemic involvement of mitochondrial dysfunction mechanisms in their follow-up. A theoretical comparison of mitochondrial status and mitochondrial dysfunction across stages of the cardiovascular continuum was performed based on a systematic analysis of the scientific literature data using general scientific, theoretical, and logical methods and normative rules. Conceptual aspects of the involvement of mitochondrial dysfunction (MD) mechanisms at each stage of the CVDs continuum were identified. MD is a dynamic, complex, multifactorial process that is characterized by quantitative and qualitative changes in the mitochondrial pool of human body cells during the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMitochondrial Function and Pathology · GDF15 and Related Biomarkers · Cardiovascular Health and Risk Factors
