About this Research Topic
Pharmacological interventions are the primary therapeutic approaches for CVDs. In the past few decades, plenty of drugs for different targets including anti-inflammatory agents have been developed and used to prevent and treat different CVDs in the clinic. In the past few years, the flood of new drugs including chemical-based drugs and natural herbal products have provided more choices to the treatment of CVDs. Recently, biotherapies and molecular targeted therapies utilizing cell-based products such as stem cells, immune cells, exosomes, cytokines, peptides and monoclonal antibodies have also been used to treat CVDs, and some of them specifically target at inflammation. The purpose of this Research Topic is to provide potential readers with new advances on prevention and treatment of CVDs, especially on the new therapies targeting chronic inflammation.
This Research Topic welcomes submissions of Original Research Articles, Reviews, and other types of articles related to cellular and molecular mechanisms of chronic inflammation in pathogenesis of CVDs, as well as novel pharmacological and biological therapies for diagnosis, prevention and treatment of CVDs. The potential subtopics are related, but not limited to the following areas:
• Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the role of inflammation in genesis and development of CVDs.
• Therapeutic effects of clinical medicine and natural products on prevention and improvement of CVDs by intervention of cardiovascular inflammation.
• Biotherapies such as stem cell and immune cell transplantations, and applications of exosomes, cytokines, peptides and monoclonal antibodies for treatment of CVDs and chronic inflammation.
• Other new approaches and diagnosis methods for CVDs.
Keywords: Chronic inflammation, Cardiovascular diseases, Pharmacological interventions, Cell-based therapies, Cellular and molecular mechanisms
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.