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Home - Emergency Medicine - The Ferroptosis Nexus: A New Culprit in Heart Failure Emergencies

Emergency Medicine

The Ferroptosis Nexus: A New Culprit in Heart Failure Emergencies

Last updated: February 1, 2026 6:51 am
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The Ferroptosis Nexus: A New Culprit in Heart Failure Emergencies

A comprehensive review in *Cardiovascular Research* synthesizes the growing evidence implicating ferroptosis—a form of iron-dependent, lipid peroxidation-driven cell death—in the progression of heart failure. The analysis spans multiple animal models, from chronic ischemic and pressure overload to septic and doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy, finding that disordered iron handling, antioxidant failure, and mitochondrial stress converge to trigger this lethal pathway, leading to contractile dysfunction and adverse cardiac remodeling. Notably, the review highlights that several established cardiometabolic drugs with proven efficacy in heart failure, such as SGLT2 inhibitors and sacubitril/valsartan, appear to exhibit anti-ferroptotic properties, offering a potential mechanistic explanation for their clinical benefits beyond their primary indications.

Why it might matter to you: For emergency physicians managing acute decompensated heart failure and cardiac arrest, understanding ferroptosis reframes myocardial injury as a potentially modifiable biochemical crisis. This emerging paradigm suggests that future acute care protocols may incorporate biomarkers of iron toxicity and lipid peroxidation to guide therapy, moving beyond traditional inotropes and diuretics. It positions established drugs like SGLT2 inhibitors, increasingly used in chronic management, as candidates for investigation in hyper-acute settings to mitigate ongoing cellular demise during a critical care presentation.

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