Cardiac Hepatopathy: New Perspectives on Old Problems through a Prism of Endogenous Metabolic Regulations by Hepatokines
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Abstract
Cardiac hepatopathy refers to acute or chronic liver damage caused by cardiac dysfunction
in the absence of any other possible causative reasons of liver injury. There is a large number
of evidence of the fact that cardiac hepatopathy is associated with poor clinical outcomes in patients
with acute or actually decompensated heart failure (HF). However, the currently dominated
pathophysiological background does not explain a role of metabolic regulative proteins secreted
by hepatocytes in progression of HF, including adverse cardiac remodeling, kidney injury, skeletal
muscle dysfunction, osteopenia, sarcopenia and cardiac cachexia. The aim of this narrative review
was to accumulate knowledge of hepatokines (adropin; fetuin-A, selenoprotein P, fibroblast growth
factor-21, and alpha-1-microglobulin) as adaptive regulators of metabolic homeostasis in patients
with HF. It is suggested that hepatokines play a crucial, causative role in inter-organ interactions
and mediate tissue protective effects counteracting oxidative stress, inflammation, mitochondrial
dysfunction, apoptosis and necrosis. The discriminative potencies of hepatokines for HF and damage
of target organs in patients with known HF is under on-going scientific discussion and requires more
investigations in the future.
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Cardiac Hepatopathy: New Perspectives on Old Problems through a Prism of Endogenous Metabolic Regulations by Hepatokines / A. A. Berezin, Z. Obradovic, T. A. Berezina, E. Boxhammer, M. Lichtenauer, A. E. Berezin // Antioxidants. - 2023. - Vol. 12. - Art. 516. - https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12020516.