Pathology of Lifestyle Diseases: Obesity, Diabetes, and Cardiovascular Disorders
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Abstract
Lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes mellitus, and cardiovascular disorders represent a major and growing public health concern worldwide. These conditions arise largely from unhealthy dietary habits, physical inactivity, and sedentary lifestyles, and are closely interconnected through shared metabolic and inflammatory pathways. From a pathological perspective, lifestyle diseases are characterized by progressive structural and functional alterations in multiple organs, driven by chronic metabolic stress, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and low-grade inflammation. Obesity is associated with adipose tissue hypertrophy, chronic inflammation, and hormonal dysregulation, which contribute to insulin resistance and metabolic imbalance. Diabetes mellitus leads to widespread microvascular and macrovascular damage, affecting organs such as the kidneys, nerves, eyes, and heart. Cardiovascular disorders are marked by endothelial dysfunction, atherosclerosis, and myocardial injury, resulting from prolonged metabolic and inflammatory insults. the pathological basis of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases, emphasizing their interconnected mechanisms and the importance of early preventive and therapeutic strategies to reduce disease burden and associated complications
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