Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a metabolic liver disease, which classically includes a spectrum of progressive pathological conditions, ranging from simple steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) with different grades of fibrosis and cirrhosis. NAFLD is also a “multisystemic” disease, NAFLD is independently associated with serious hepatic complications (e.g., hepatic decompensation, hepatocellular carcinoma [HCC]), but also with an increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD).
(a) hepatic lipid accumulation (e.g., di-acyl glycerol [DAG]) in NAFLD patients impairs insulin signalling, thereby conditioning insulin resistance (IR) through different mechanisms, including the inhibition of phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) [18][1] and the activation of protein kinase C (PKC)-e that can inhibit the action of insulin receptor and promote the lipid accumulation [19][2]. In particular, hepatic and systemic insulin resistance is one of the primary mechanisms for inducing atherogenic lipoproteins and dysglycaemia. Notably, both atherogenic dyslipidemia and dysglycaemia mediate CVD risk in NAFLD patients with T2DM;
(b) the release into the bloodstream of several pro-inflammatory (e.g., tumour necrosis factor-a [TNF-a], interleukin-6 [IL-6]), pro-oxidant and pro-coagulant factors (e.g., fibrinogen, factor VIII, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1) as well as pro-fibrogenic mediators. In particular, the synthesis of lipids, including DAG, may also contribute to the hepatic production of inflammatory cytokines and pro-coagulant factors [13,20,21,22][3][4][5][6];
(c) the bidirectional relationship between NAFLD and hypertension [23][7]. Several observational studies and some meta-analyses have reported that patients with NAFLD have an increased risk of developing hypertension [24][8], thus suggesting that this association may partly mediate the relationship between NAFLD and cardiac complications and that that NAFLD may be a consequence, but also a cause of hypertension [23][7];
(d) patients with NAFLD have early changes in myocardial substrate metabolism inducing cardiac functional disturbances, probably conditioning a higher risk of heart failure [25][9] and arrhythmias [22,26][6][10];
(e) chronic hyperglycemia induces an inflammatory and osteoblastic phenotype in valvular interstitial cells in experimental models of aortic valve sclerosis [27][11]. Increased valvular inflammation, through a systemic inflammatory state, could also mediate the increased cardiac valve sclerosis in NAFLD patients, independent of the presence of T2DM;
(f) experimental data also indicate that NAFLD, mainly when advanced stages occur, may contribute to the activation of multiple pathways involved in the pathophysiology of CKD [10,28][12][13]. In this regard, atherogenic dyslipidaemia, hypertension, insulin resistance, oxidative stress and pro-inflammatory factors that, as mentioned above, are promoted and exacerbated by NAFLD status, may directly contribute to the vascular and renal damage [28][13]. Moreover, impaired activation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) may also contribute to the renovascular injury by inflammation pathways [28][13]. Finally, accumulating evidence also suggests a potential and independent association between PNPLA3 (patatin like phospholipase domain containing-3) rs738409, which is the most important polymorphism associated with NAFLD and its advanced forms [29][14], and kidney dysfunction [28][13].