Importancia del factor de necrosis tumoral alfa en la patogenia de la insuficiencia cardíaca

Autor: Guillermo Torre Amione, Eduardo Heberto Herrera Garza, Alfonso Treviño Treviño, Humberto Rodríguez González, Marcos Ibarra Flores, José Luis Herrera Garza
Rok vydání: 2002
Předmět:
Zdroj: Revista Española de Cardiología. 55:61-66
ISSN: 0300-8932
Popis: Clinical and experimental evidence demonstrating the effects of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in patients with heart failure continues to accumulate. It is well established that high concentrations of TNF-alpha appear in the circulation of patients with heart failure and that these levels have a directly proportional correlation with the patient's functional class. TNF-alpha levels also show a linear relation with prognosis. These circulating levels are responsible for the decreased expression of myocardial TNF-alpha receptors observed in heart failure. As a result of extrapolation of findings from experimental animals, we assume that TNF-alpha is deleterious to myocardial function in humans because it induces a negative inotropic state in patients who have not undergone heart transplant. Supporting this assumption is the fact that the resolution or improvement of pressure overload (obstructive hypertrophic myocardiopathy, by ethanol ablation) and volume overload (terminal dilated myocardiopathy, by ventricular assistance) states is accompanied by a decrease in myocardial TNF-alpha expression. The use of specific antagonists of circulating TNF-alpha in patients with symptomatic heart failure has been demonstrated to be safe and possibly effective. At present, multicenter studies are under way to assess the efficacy of this antagonism in a larger number of patients. If the results of these studies are favorable, we will have new therapeutic elements for managing patients with advanced hear failure. The transplanted heart behaves differently from the native heart. From the early stages of HTx, myocardial TNF-alpha expression is greatly increased (much more than in patients with heart failure) and not associated with contractile dysfunction, in contrast with what occurs in the native heart. However, we know that the transplanted heart soon develops ventricular hypertrophy, fibrosis, diastolic dysfunction, and late graft failure, even in the presence of normal epicardial coronary arteries. Clinical evidence suggests that TNF-alpha may be involved in these processes.
Databáze: OpenAIRE