Experimental Gerontology (May 2024)

Microbiome interactions with different risk factors in development of myocardial infarction

  • Manisha Bijla,
  • Sunil Kumar Saini,
  • Ajai Kumar Pathak,
  • Kamal Prakash Bharadwaj,
  • Katyayani Sukhavasi,
  • Ayurshi Patil,
  • Diksha Saini,
  • Rakesh Yadav,
  • Shalini Singh,
  • Christiaan Leeuwenburgh,
  • Pramod Kumar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 189
p. 112409

Abstract

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Among all non-communicable diseases, Cardiovascular Diseases (CVDs) stand as the leading global cause of mortality. Within this spectrum, Myocardial Infarction (MI) strikingly accounts for over 15 % of all deaths. The intricate web of risk factors for MI, comprising family history, tobacco use, oral health, hypertension, nutritional pattern, and microbial infections, is firmly influenced by the human gut and oral microbiota, their diversity, richness, and dysbiosis, along with their respective metabolites. Host genetic factors, especially allelic variations in signaling and inflammatory markers, greatly affect the progression or severity of the disease. Despite the established significance of the human microbiome-nutrient-metabolite interplay in associations with CVDs, the unexplored terrain of the gut-heart-oral axis has risen as a critical knowledge gap. Moreover, the pivotal role of the microbiome and the complex interplay with host genetics, compounded by age-related changes, emerges as an area of vital importance in the development of MI. In addition, a distinctive disease susceptibility and severity influenced by gender-based or ancestral differences, adds a crucial insights to the association with increased mortality. Here, we aimed to provide an overview on interactions of microbiome (oral and gut) with major risk factors (tobacco use, alcohol consumption, diet, hypertension host genetics, gender, and aging) in the development of MI and therapeutic regulation.

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