Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
Organ fibrosis is a common pathological outcome of several etiological
conditions resulting in chronic tissue injury and is usually defined
as an excessive deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM) components,
leading with the time to scar tissue formation and eventually
organ dysfunction and failure. The progressive architectural remodeling
(i.e. fibrogenic progression) can be seen in nearly all tissues and organs
and is recognized as a leading cause of morbidity and mortality
worldwide. In addition, organ fibrosis is also emerged in recent years as
critical for the development and treatment of malignant tumors, due to
the significant impact of this process on carcinogenesis, invasiveness
and metastasis as well as drug delivery to tumor masses. Despite the
impressive amount of pre-clinical studies performed in the last decades
using animal (mostly murine) models and the overall fibrosis-related
high mortality and morbidity reported in humans, we still essentially
lack validated effective anti-fibrotic therapies to meet the specific
clinical needs.
The present special issue is then an attempt to provide readers with
up-to-date information in order to cover an area of research that has
grown steadily in the past two decades providing major advances in our
knowledge on key events, mechanisms and clinical issues underlying
fibrogenic progression in a defined organ.
In the first review of this issue Ralf Weiskirchen, Sabine Weiskirchen
and Frank Tacke provide an introductory overview on major and
common (i.e., organ-independent) basic mechanisms, mediators and
signaling pathways, cells and processes involved in organ/tissue fibrosis,
also including the principles of fibrosis reversal/resolution and
general issues concerning diagnosis and staging of fibrosis. The following
reviews in the issue are then dedicated to fibrosis in selected
organs in which fibrogenic progression towards architectural remodeling
and organ dysfunction is known to have a major worldwide
health impact on general population, including kidney fibrosis (by
Sonia Djudjaj and Peter Boor), liver fibrosis (by Maurizio Parola and
Massimo Pinzani), lung fibrosis (by Diptiman Chanda and coworkers),
cardiac fibrosis (by Nikolaos G. Frangogiannis) and intestinal
fibrosis (by Marco Vincenzo Lenti and Antonio Di Sabatino). In these
organ-oriented reviews, Authors have focused their contribution on
peculiar and/or emerging pathophysiological issues for the specific
organ, particularly in terms of etiological causes, morphological patterns
of fibrosis as well as of cells, mechanisms and signalling pathways
involved. In addition, Authors have also provided information on recently
emerged pathogenetic targets and relevant clinical issues, including
clinical window(s) for treatment and biomarkers for the assessment
of disease progression and regression.
Tipologia CRIS:
03B-Review in Rivista / Rassegna della Lett. in Riv. / Nota Critica
Keywords:
Organ fibrosis
Elenco autori:
Parola, Maurizio*; Pinzani, Massimo
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