About this Research Topic
This Research Topic aims to identify gaps in current knowledge and pose questions for future research. It serves as both a repository of current understanding of the links between normal and premature aging of the vasculature and human diseases, and a platform for novel and innovative studies of cellular processes and signaling pathways leading to increased inflammatory responses, vascular endothelial dysfunction, and cardiometabolic disorders. The generated knowledge will shed light on the contribution of normal and/or accelerated vascular aging to various human conditions such as early-onset hypertension, atherosclerosis, inflammatory vascular diseases, aneurysms, diabetic vascular diseases, cerebrovascular diseases, renal artery stenosis, and pulmonary hypertension.
This Research Topic will focus on areas of basic, translational, and clinical research investigating the potential links between normal and accelerated aging of the vasculature and the development and progression of cardiovascular complications. New original research papers, reviews, case reports, conference papers, and brief reports are welcome. Potential areas of interest are:
• Role of Senescence in vascular aging
• Premature and accelerated vascular aging
• Vascular calcification & wall remodeling and stiffness (collagen, elastin, glycation)
• Endothelial dysfunction & vascular aging
• Oxidative vascular dysfunctions
• Early- or Late-onset hypertension
• Cerebrovascular diseases/aging
• Metabolic vascular diseases (diabetes, obesity)
• Mitochondria in vascular aging
• microRNA regulation of vascular aging
• Inflammation in vascular aging
• Sex hormone & vascular aging
• Lifestyle & vascular aging (exercise, smoking, diet, epigenetics)
Keywords: Vascular aging, Arterial stiffness, Vascular wall remodeling in aging, Premature vascular aging, MicroRNA in vascular aging, Inflammation, Metabolic disorders, sex hormones, atherosclerotic vascular disease, oxidative stress, hypertension, cerebrovascular
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.