1. Hearts apart: sex differences in cardiac remodeling in health and disease
- Author
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Martin, Thomas G. and Leinwand, Leslie A.
- Subjects
Heart diseases -- Diagnosis -- Demographic aspects ,Health care industry ,Diagnosis ,Demographic aspects ,Health aspects - Abstract
Biological sex is an important modifier of physiology and influences pathobiology in many diseases. While heart disease is the number one cause of death worldwide in both men and women, sex differences exist at the organ and cellular scales, affecting clinical presentation, diagnosis, and treatment. In this Review, we highlight baseline sex differences in cardiac structure, function, and cellular signaling and discuss the contribution of sex hormones and chromosomes to these characteristics. The heart is a remarkably plastic organ and rapidly responds to physiological and pathological cues by modifying form and function. The nature and extent of cardiac remodeling in response to these stimuli are often dependent on biological sex. We discuss organ- and molecular-level sex differences in adaptive physiological remodeling and pathological cardiac remodeling from pressure and volume overload, ischemia, and genetic heart disease. Finally, we offer a perspective on key future directions for research into cardiac sex differences., Introduction Biological sex influences nearly every aspect of human physiology and has important implications for many diseases. Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women, [...]
- Published
- 2024
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