Abstract
Interdisciplinary research has revealed that heart, kidney, liver, and metabolic diseases share interlinked pathological mechanisms, including inflammation, oxidative stress, insulin resistance, and endothelial health issues. However, integrated care for these diseases is challenging due to different symptoms, diagnostic rules, and treatment options. The review aims to study the common mechanisms behind cardiovascular-renal-hepatic-metabolic syndrome and explore ways to coordinate management. When these systems work poorly together, damage can form a vicious cycle, increasing hypertension, chronic kidney disease, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and metabolic syndrome. Changes in medicine, daily lifestyle, and drugs can interrupt the pathological cascade. However, clinical practice is hindered by patient presentations, lack of teamwork across healthcare specialties, and incomplete therapy plans. Gut-organ axis dysfunction and inflammation play a significant role in multiple organ diseases, and prompt risk assessment and early intervention can prevent heart damage.