Role of Oxidative Modifications in Atherosclerosis
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Abstract
This review focuses on the role of oxidative processes in atherosclerosis and its resultant cardiovascular events. There is now a consensus that atherosclerosis represents a state of heightened oxidative stress characterized by lipid and protein oxidation in the vascular wall. The oxidative modification hypothesis of atherosclerosis predicts that low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation is an early event in atherosclerosis and that oxidized LDL contributes to atherogenesis. In support of this hypothesis, oxidized LDL can support foam cell formation in vitro, the lipid in human lesions is substantially oxidized, there is evidence for the presence of oxidized LDL in vivo, oxidized LDL has a number of potentially…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Oxidative stress
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- Foam cell
- Reactive oxygen species
- Inflammation
- Lipoprotein
- Context (archaeology)
- Lipid oxidation
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