From Metabolic Syndrome to Atrial Fibrillation: Linking Inflammatory and Fibrotic Biomarkers with Atrial Remodeling and Imaging-Based Evaluation—A Narrative Review
Adrian-Grigore Merce, Daniel-Dumitru Nisulescu, Anca Hermenean, Oana-Maria Burciu, Iulia-Raluca Munteanu, Adrian-Petru Merce, Daniel-Miron Brie, Cristian Mornos

TL;DR
This review explores how metabolic syndrome and inflammatory biomarkers contribute to atrial fibrosis and atrial fibrillation, emphasizing their role in disease progression and potential for targeted therapies.
Contribution
The paper integrates evidence on specific inflammatory and fibrotic biomarkers and their molecular pathways in linking metabolic syndrome to atrial remodeling and AF.
Findings
TGF-β1 is a central profibrotic cytokine that promotes atrial fibrosis and structural remodeling.
Metabolic syndrome is strongly associated with elevated inflammatory biomarkers and increased AF risk.
Echocardiographic data correlate with circulating biomarkers, offering non-invasive evaluation of atrial remodeling.
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most prevalent sustained arrhythmia worldwide and is now increasingly regarded as a disease of chronic inflammation and progressive atrial fibrosis. Understanding of molecular mechanisms that mediate the linkage between systemic metabolic dysregulation, inflammation, and structural atrial changes is crucial for informing risk stratification and targeting of prevention strategies. This review provides evidence from 105 studies focusing on the contributions of transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6), galectin-3, and galectin-1 to cardiac fibrogenesis, atrial fibrosis, and AF pathogenesis. We also link metabolic syndrome to these biomarkers and to atrial remodeling, as well as echocardiographic correlates of fibrosis. TGF-β1 is established as the central profibrotic cytokine and promotes Smad-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtrial Fibrillation Management and Outcomes · Cardiac Fibrosis and Remodeling · IL-33, ST2, and ILC Pathways
