The Pathophysiological Associations Between Obesity, NAFLD, and Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Diseases.
Li. Meng M; Cui. Man M; Li. Guoxia G; Liu. Yueqiu Y; Xu. Yunsheng Y; Eftekhar. Seyed Parsa SP; Ala. Moein M
Key Findings
- Obesity triggers insulin resistance, inflammation, gut dysbiosis, and other changes that cause NAFLD and atherosclerosis.
- Significant weight loss—whether from diet, surgery, or drugs—improves both fatty liver and cardiovascular risk.
- Retatrutide (and tirzepatide) simultaneously target multiple mechanisms (GLP‑1, GIP, glucagon receptors) and have shown greater weight loss and metabolic benefits in early studies.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, retatrutide looks like a promising next‑generation weight‑loss peptide that could also help liver health and heart risk. Keep an eye on emerging clinical data and consider it as a potential add‑on to lifestyle interventions once safety and dosing are clarified.
Summary
The article explains how obesity starts a cascade that leads to fatty liver and clogged arteries, and how losing weight can reverse these problems. It highlights that new drugs like retatrutide hit several of the underlying pathways at once, giving bigger weight‑loss results and better liver and heart health than older treatments.
Abstract
Obesity, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases are common and growing public health concerns. Previous epidemiological studies unfolded the robust correlation between obesity, NAFLD, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. Obesity is a well-known risk factor for NAFLD, and both of them can markedly increase the odds of atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. On the other hand, significant weight loss achieved by lifestyle modification, bariatric surgery, or medications, such as semaglutide, can concomitantly improve NAFLD and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. Therefore, certain pathophysiological links are involved in the development of NAFLD in obesity, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases in obesity and NAFLD. Moreover, recent studies indicated that simultaneously targeting several mechanisms by tirzepatide and retatrutide leads to greater weight loss and markedly improves the complications of metabolic syndrome. These findings remind the importance of a mechanistic viewpoint for breaking the association between obesity, NAFLD, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. In this review article, we mainly focus on shared pathophysiological mechanisms, including insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, GLP1 signaling, inflammation, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, gut dysbiosis, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) overactivity, and endothelial dysfunction. Most of these pathophysiological alterations are primarily initiated by obesity. The development of NAFLD further exacerbates these molecular and cellular alterations, leading to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease development or progression as the final manifestation of molecular perturbation. A better insight into these mechanisms makes it feasible to develop new multi-target approaches to simultaneously unhinge the deleterious chain of events linking obesity and NAFLD to atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-03-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1055/a-2266-1503
23
184