Gut Microbiome and Its Role in Valvular Heart Disease: Not a “Gutted” Relationship
Author:
Nayak Gyanaranjan1ORCID, Dimitriadis Kyriakos1, Pyrpyris Nikolaos1ORCID, Manti Magdalini2ORCID, Kamperidis Nikolaos2, Kamperidis Vasileios3ORCID, Ziakas Antonios3, Tsioufis Konstantinos1
Affiliation:
1. First Department of Cardiology, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Hippokration General Hospital, 115 27 Athens, Greece 2. St Mark’s Hospital, Imperial College London, London HA1 3UJ, UK 3. First Cardiology Department, AHEPA University Hospital, Medical School, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54453 Thessaloniki, Greece
Abstract
The role of the gut microbiome (GM) and oral microbiome (OM) in cardiovascular disease (CVD) has been increasingly being understood in recent years. It is well known that GM is a risk factor for various CVD phenotypes, including hypertension, dyslipidemia, heart failure and atrial fibrillation. However, its role in valvular heart disease (VHD) is less well understood. Research shows that, direct, microbe-mediated and indirect, metabolite-mediated damage as a result of gut dysbiosis and environmental factors results in a subclinical, chronic, systemic inflammatory state, which promotes inflammatory cell infiltration in heart valves and subsequently, via pro-inflammatory molecules, initiates a cascade of reaction, resulting in valve calcification, fibrosis and dysfunction. This relationship between GM and VHD adds a pathophysiological link to the pathogenesis of VHD, which can be aimed therapeutically, in order to prevent or regress any risk for valvular pathologies. Therapeutic interventions include dietary modifications and lifestyle interventions, in order to influence environmental factors that can promote gut dysbiosis. Furthermore, the combination of probiotics and prebiotics, as well as fecal m transplantation and targeted treatment with inducers or inhibitors of microbial enzymes have showed promising results in animal and/or clinical studies, with the potential to reduce the inflammatory state and restore the normal gut flora in patients. This review, thus, is going to discuss the pathophysiological links behind the relationship of GM, CVD and VHD, as well as explore the recent data regarding the effect of GM-altering treatment in CVD, cardiac function and systemic inflammation.
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