Current Approach to Risk Factors and Biomarkers of Intestinal Fibrosis in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Dudek. Patrycja P; Talar-Wojnarowska. Renata R
Key Findings
- s disease, often leads to intestinal fibrosis that causes strictures and surgery.",
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Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this research isn’t directly useful because it focuses on disease‑specific diagnostics rather than general health interventions. LL‑37 is mentioned only as a disease marker, not as a supplement or therapy, so there’s no actionable protocol to apply for longevity or performance.
Summary
The paper talks about how people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) can develop scar tissue in their intestines, which makes the disease worse. Researchers are looking for easy‑to‑measure signs in the blood that show when this scarring is happening. One of the possible signs is a protein called LL‑37, but the study only mentions it as a marker, not as something you can take or change yourself.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), especially Crohn's disease (CD), characterized by a chronic inflammatory process and progressive intestinal tissue damage, leads to the unrestrained proliferation of mesenchymal cells and the development of bowel strictures. Complications induced by fibrosis are related to high rates of morbidity and mortality and lead to a substantial number of hospitalizations and surgical procedures, generating high healthcare costs. The development of easily obtained, reliable fibrogenesis biomarkers is essential to provide an important complementary tool to existing diagnostic and prognostic methods in IBD management, guiding decisions on the intensification of pharmacotherapy, proceeding to surgical methods of treatment and monitoring the efficacy of anti-fibrotic therapy in the future. The most promising potential markers of fibrosis include cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP), hepatocyte growth factor activator (HGFA), and fibronectin isoform- extra domain A (ED-A), as well as antibodies against granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF Ab), cathelicidin (LL-37), or circulatory miRNAs: miR-19a-3p and miR-19b-3p. This review summarizes the role of genetic predisposition, and risk factors and serological markers potentially contributing to the pathophysiology of fibrotic strictures in the course of IBD.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-02-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/medicina60020305
5
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