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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Environmental Stressors and Their Impact on Health and Disease with Focus on Oxidative Stress
Andreas DaiberThomas Münzelsubject
0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyExposomePhysiologyClinical BiochemistryPoison controlDiseaseBiochemistryOccupational safety and healthEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesRisk FactorsAir PollutionEnvironmental healthEpidemiologymedicineHumansMolecular BiologyVehicle EmissionsGeneral Environmental ScienceInflammationbusiness.industryStressorHuman factors and ergonomicsEnvironmental ExposureCell BiologyRisk factor (computing)Oxidative Stress030104 developmental biologyCardiovascular DiseasesGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesParticulate Matterbusinessdescription
Epidemiological, preclinical and interventional clinical studies have demonstrated that environmental stressors are associated with health problems, namely cardiovascular diseases. According to estimations of the World Health Organization (WHO), environmental risk factors account for an appreciable part of global deaths and life years spent with disability. This Forum addresses the impact of the environmental risk factors such as traffic noise exposure, air pollution by particulate matter (PM), mental stress/loneliness, and the life style risk factor (water-pipe) smoking on health and disease with focus on the cardiovascular system. We will critically discuss the use of observatory/modifiable biomarkers of oxidative stress and inflammation in environmental research on the aforementioned risk factors highlighting the need of exposome studies. Another focus will be on the epigenetic regulation via microRNAs in environmental stress upon exposure to noise and toxins/heavy metals as well as mental stress conditions, providing mechanistic insights into the modulation of microRNA signaling by oxidative stress, and vice versa the contribution of microRNAs to oxidative stress conditions. We will also provide an in-depth overview on the mechanistic pathways that lead to health problems (e.g., cardiovascular diseases) in response to environmental psychosocial stress, air pollution exposure in the form of ambient PM and diesel exhaust, traffic noise exposure, and the life style drug (water-pipe) smoking. Almost all stressors share the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis and of the sympathetic nervous system with subsequent onset of inflammation and oxidative stress, defining the here proposed therapeutic (antioxidant and exercise) strategies. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 28, 735-740.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-12-28 | Antioxidants & Redox Signaling |