The Pathogenesis of Systemic Sclerosis: An Understanding Based on a Common Pathologic Cascade across Multiple Organs and Additional Organ-Specific Pathologies.
Yoshihide AsanoPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2020)
Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a multisystem autoimmune and vascular disease resulting in fibrosis of various organs with unknown etiology. Accumulating evidence suggests that a common pathologic cascade across multiple organs and additional organ-specific pathologies underpin SSc development. The common pathologic cascade starts with vascular injury due to autoimmune attacks and unknown environmental factors. After that, dysregulated angiogenesis and defective vasculogenesis promote vascular structural abnormalities, such as capillary loss and arteriolar stenosis, while aberrantly activated endothelial cells facilitate the infiltration of circulating immune cells into perivascular areas of various organs. Arteriolar stenosis directly causes pulmonary arterial hypertension, scleroderma renal crisis and digital ulcers. Chronic inflammation persistently activates interstitial fibroblasts, leading to the irreversible fibrosis of multiple organs. The common pathologic cascade interacts with a variety of modifying factors in each organ, such as keratinocytes and adipocytes in the skin, esophageal stratified squamous epithelia and myenteric nerve system in gastrointestinal tract, vasospasm of arterioles in the heart and kidney, and microaspiration of gastric content in the lung. To better understand SSc pathogenesis and develop new disease-modifying therapies, it is quite important to understand the complex pathogenesis of SSc from the two distinct perspectives, namely the common pathologic cascade and additional organ-specific pathologies.
Keyphrases
- systemic sclerosis
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- interstitial lung disease
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- endothelial cells
- locally advanced
- multiple sclerosis
- wound healing
- pulmonary artery
- pulmonary hypertension
- heart failure
- lymph node
- oxidative stress
- public health
- adipose tissue
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- drug induced
- rheumatoid arthritis
- coronary artery
- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- atrial fibrillation
- radiation therapy
- extracellular matrix
- high glucose
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia