Cardiovascular Consequences of Metabolic Targeting in Obesity
Wednesday April 25, 2018
8:30 am
-
11:00 am
Eastern Time (ET)
Room 16B
CVP
DPE
TCP
Chair :
Amy Arnold
Penn State College of Medicine
Debra Diz
Wake Forest School of Medicine
Obesity is increasing at an alarming rate worldwide. The majority of obese patients have hypertension, which increases risk for cardiovascular disease. While there is a well-established clinical association, there is an unmet need to better understand integrative molecular and hormonal mechanisms underlying cardiovascular and metabolic derangements in obesity. A failure to consider overlap in the pathways regulating these functions has led to adverse cardiovascular effects of several anti-obesity drugs. This symposium will highlight the need to study integrative cardiometabolic mechanisms in obesity, and will describe potential pharmacologic targets with evidence for positive metabolic and cardiovascular effects in this disease.
Speakers
Philipp Scherer
- The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Adiponectin: An Emerging Adipokine Mediator of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Health
Amy Arnold
- Penn State College of Medicine
Angiotensin-(1-7): A Positive Force for Cardiometabolic Function
Dongsheng Cai
- Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Hypothalamic Inflammation: A Novel Target Linking Energy Imbalance and Hypertension in Obesity
Debra Diz
- Wake Forest School of Medicine
The Endocannabinoid System and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors
Korin Leffler
- East Carolina University, Brody School of Medicine
Disrupted Adiponectin-Connexin43 Signaling Underlies the Exacerbated Myocardial Dysfunction in Diabetic Female Rats
Rebecca Fleeman
- University of Florida
Angiotensin-(1-7)-Mediated Increases in Energy Expenditure Appear Independent of the Hypothalamic Melanocortin System
Amanda Soler
- New York Medical College
Intra-Abdominal Lipectomy Reduces Large Arterial Stiffness and Blood Pressure in Metabolic Syndrome