Critical developmental periods in the pathogenesis of hypertension

Physiol Res. 2012;61(Suppl 1):S9-17. doi: 10.33549/physiolres.932364.

Abstract

Hypertension is one of the major risk factor of cardiovascular diseases, but after a century of clinical and basic research, the discrete etiology of this disease is still not fully understood. One reason is that blood pressure is a quantitative trait with multifactorial determination. Numerous genes, environmental factors as well as epigenetic factors should be considered. There is no doubt that although the full manifestation of hypertension and other cardiovascular diseases usually occurs predominantly in adulthood and/or senescence, the roots can be traced back to early ontogeny. The detailed knowledge of the ontogenetic changes occurring in the cardiovascular system of experimental animals during particular critical periods (developmental windows) could help to solve this problem in humans and might facilitate the age-specific prevention of human hypertension. We thus believe that this approach might contribute to the reduction of cardiovascular morbidity among susceptible individuals in the future.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Arterial Pressure / genetics
  • Blood Pressure / genetics
  • Cardiovascular Diseases / etiology
  • Cardiovascular Diseases / genetics
  • Epistasis, Genetic
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
  • Humans
  • Hypertension / genetics*
  • Hypertension / pathology*
  • Hypertension / prevention & control
  • Quantitative Trait Loci
  • Risk Factors