Relations (1)

related 2.81 — strongly supporting 5 facts

Aging and cardiovascular disease are linked by shared pathological processes such as chronic inflammation, often termed 'inflammageing' [1], and the accumulation of senescence-associated markers in cardiac cell lineages [2]. Furthermore, both conditions are connected through common contributors like clonal hematopoiesis [3], T cell immunosenescence [4], and systemic inflammation {fact:1, fact:5}.

Facts (5)

Sources
Cellular rejuvenation: molecular mechanisms and potential ... - Nature nature.com Nature 2 facts
referenceShirakawa and Sano reviewed T cell immunosenescence in the context of aging, obesity, and cardiovascular disease in the journal Cells in 2021.
referenceLibby, P. and Kobold, S. published a study in 2019 titled 'Inflammation: a common contributor to cancer, aging, and cardiovascular diseases-expanding the concept of cardio-oncology' in Cardiovascular Research, which posits inflammation as a common factor contributing to cancer, aging, and cardiovascular diseases.
Chronic inflammation in the etiology of disease across the life span nature.com Nature 1 fact
claimFerrucci, L. and Fabbri, E. (2018) define 'inflammageing' as chronic inflammation associated with aging, cardiovascular disease, and frailty.
Editorial: Inflammation and chronic disease - Frontiers frontiersin.org Frontiers 1 fact
claimClonal hematopoiesis connects aging and inflammation in the context of cardiovascular disease, as discussed by Jaiswal and Libby in 2020.
Should you be tested for inflammation? health.harvard.edu Harvard Health Publishing 1 fact
claimStamping out inflammation would not eliminate cardiovascular disease, cancer, dementia, or aging.