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Environmental stressors and cardio-metabolic disease: part II-mechanistic insights.

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TLDR
A considerable body of evidence suggests that these environmental agents induce low-grade inflammation, oxidative stress, vascular dysfunction, and autonomic nervous system imbalance, thereby facilitating the development of diseases such as hypertension and diabetes.
Abstract
Environmental factors can act as facilitators of chronic non-communicable diseases. Ambient noise and air pollution collectively outrank all other environmental risk factors in importance, contributing to over 75% of the disease and disability burden associated with known environmental risk factors. In the first part of this review, we discussed the global burden and epidemiologic evidence supporting the importance of these novel risk factors as facilitators of cardiometabolic disease. In this part, we will discuss pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for noise and air pollution-mediated effects. Akin to traditional cardiovascular risk factors, a considerable body of evidence suggests that these environmental agents induce low-grade inflammation, oxidative stress, vascular dysfunction, and autonomic nervous system imbalance, thereby facilitating the development of diseases such as hypertension and diabetes. Through their impact on traditional risk factors and via additional novel mechanisms, environmental risk factors may have much larger impact on cardiovascular events than currently appreciated. In the second part of this review, we discuss deficiencies and gaps in knowledge and opportunities for new research.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Air Pollution and Cardiovascular Disease: JACC State-of-the-Art Review

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of air pollution and health, including assessment of exposure, impact on CV outcomes, mechanistic underpinnings, and impact ofAir pollution reduction strategies to mitigate CV risk, and concludes with future challenges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiovascular disease burden from ambient air pollution in Europe reassessed using novel hazard ratio functions.

TL;DR: New data based on novel hazard ratio functions suggesting that the health impacts attributable to ambient air pollution in Europe are substantially higher than previously assumed, though subject to considerable uncertainty, imply that replacing fossil fuels by clean, renewable energy sources could substantially reduce the loss of life expectancy from air pollution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decline in Cardiovascular Mortality: Possible Causes and Implications

TL;DR: The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute is soliciting input that could inform a follow-up conference on or near the 40th anniversary of the original landmark conference to further explore trends in cardiovascular mortality in the context of what has come before and what may lie ahead.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental determinants of cardiovascular disease: lessons learned from air pollution.

TL;DR: The empirical evidence supporting the effects of air pollution on cardiovascular health is examined, potential mechanisms that lead to increased cardiovascular risk are described, and measures to reduce this risk and identify key gaps in knowledge that could help address the increasing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality associated with air pollution are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Noise and the Cardiovascular System

TL;DR: Noise has been found associated with annoyance, stress, sleep disturbance, and impaired cognitive performance, and epidemiological studies have found that environmental noise is associated with an increased incidence of arterial hypertension, myocardial infarction, heart failure, and stroke.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep duration predicts cardiovascular outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies

TL;DR: Both short and long duration of sleep are predictors, or markers, of cardiovascular outcomes of coronary heart disease and total cardiovascular disease.
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Sleep Disturbance, Sleep Duration, and Inflammation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Cohort Studies and Experimental Sleep Deprivation

TL;DR: Global evidence linking sleep disturbance, sleep duration, and inflammation in adult humans is assessed and sleep disturbance and long sleep duration are associated with increases in markers of systemic inflammation.
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Critical roles for CCR2 and MCP-3 in monocyte mobilization from bone marrow and recruitment to inflammatory sites

TL;DR: It is reported that CC chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2) is highly expressed on a subpopulation of blood monocytes whose numbers are markedly decreased in CCR2(-/-) mice, suggesting that CCR 2 is critical for monocyte egress.
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Long-term Air Pollution Exposure and Acceleration of Atherosclerosis and Vascular Inflammation in an Animal Model

TL;DR: In an apoE-/- mouse model, long-term exposure to low concentration of PM2.5 altered vasomotor tone, induced vascular inflammation, and potentiated atherosclerosis in a susceptible disease model.
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