Plata-Salamán C R
Division of Molecular Biology, School of Life and Health Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, USA.
Nutrition. 2000 Oct;16(10):1009-12. doi: 10.1016/s0899-9007(00)00413-5.
The cachexia-anorexia syndrome occurs in chronic pathophysiologic processes including cancer, infection with human immunodeficiency virus, bacterial and parasitic diseases, inflammatory bowel disease, liver disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Cachexia makes an organism susceptible to secondary pathologies and can result in death. Cachexia-anorexia may result from pain, depression or anxiety, hypogeusia and hyposmia, taste and food aversions, chronic nausea, vomiting, early satiety, malfunction of the gastrointestinal system (delayed digestion, malabsorption, gastric stasis and associated delayed emptying, and/or atrophic changes of the mucosa), metabolic shifts, cytokine action, production of substances by tumor cells, and/or iatrogenic causes such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The cachexia-anorexia syndrome also involves metabolic and immune changes (mediated by either the pathophysiologic process, i.e., tumor, or host-derived chemical factors, e.g., peptides, neurotransmitters, cytokines, and lipid-mobilizing factors) and is associated with hypertriacylglycerolemia, lipolysis, and acceleration of protein turnover. These changes result in the loss of fat mass and body protein. Increased resting energy expenditure in weight-losing cachectic patients can occur despite the reduced dietary intake, indicating a systemic dysregulation of host metabolism. During cachexia, the organism is maintained in a constant negative energy balance. This can rarely be explained by the actual energy and substrate demands by tumors in patients with cancer. Overall, the cachectic profile is significantly different than that observed during starvation. Cachexia may result not only from anorexia and a decreased caloric intake but also from malabsorption and losses from the body (ulcers, hemorrhage, effusions). In any case, the major deficit of a cachectic organism is a negative energy balance. Cytokines are proposed to participate in the development and/or progression of cachexia-anorexia; interleukin-1, interleukin-6 (and its subfamily members such as ciliary neurotrophic factor and leukemia inhibitory factor), interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor have been associated with various cachectic conditions. Controversy has focused on the requirement of increased cytokine concentrations in the circulation or other body fluids (e.g., cerebrospinal fluid) to demonstrate cytokine involvement in cachexia-anorexia. Cytokines, however, also act in paracrine, autocrine, and intracrine manners, activities that cannot be detected in the circulation. In fact, paracrine interactions represent a predominant cytokine mode of action within organs, including the brain. Data show that cytokines may be involved in cachectic-anorectic processes by being produced and by acting locally in specific brain regions. Brain synthesis of cytokines has been shown in peripheral models of cancer, peripheral inflammation, and during peripheral cytokine administration; these data support a role for brain cytokines as mediators of neurologic and neuropsychiatric manifestations of disease and in the brain-to-peripheral communication (e.g., through the autonomic nervous system). Brain mechanisms that merit significant attention in the cachexia-anorexia syndrome are those that result from interactions among cytokines, peptides/neuropeptides, and neurotransmitters. These interactions could result in additive, synergistic, or antagonistic activities and can involve modifications of transducing molecules and intracellular mediators. Thus, the data show that the cachexia-anorexia syndrome is multifactorial, and understanding the interactions between peripheral and brain mechanisms is pivotal to characterizing the underlying integrative pathophysiology of this disorder.
恶病质-厌食综合征发生于多种慢性病理生理过程,包括癌症、人类免疫缺陷病毒感染、细菌和寄生虫疾病、炎症性肠病、肝脏疾病、阻塞性肺疾病、心血管疾病以及类风湿关节炎。恶病质会使机体易患继发性病变,并可能导致死亡。恶病质-厌食可能由疼痛、抑郁或焦虑、味觉减退和嗅觉减退、味觉和食物厌恶、慢性恶心、呕吐、早饱、胃肠系统功能障碍(消化延迟、吸收不良、胃潴留及相关排空延迟和/或黏膜萎缩性改变)、代谢变化、细胞因子作用、肿瘤细胞产生的物质以及/或者化疗和放疗等医源性因素引起。恶病质-厌食综合征还涉及代谢和免疫变化(由病理生理过程即肿瘤或宿主衍生的化学因子如肽、神经递质、细胞因子和脂质动员因子介导),并与高甘油三酯血症、脂肪分解和蛋白质周转加速有关。这些变化导致脂肪量和身体蛋白质的丢失。尽管体重减轻的恶病质患者饮食摄入量减少,但静息能量消耗仍可能增加,这表明宿主代谢存在系统性失调。在恶病质期间,机体维持持续的负能量平衡。这很少能用癌症患者肿瘤实际的能量和底物需求来解释。总体而言,恶病质状态与饥饿期间观察到的情况显著不同。恶病质不仅可能源于厌食和热量摄入减少,还可能源于吸收不良以及身体的损耗(溃疡、出血、积液)。无论如何,恶病质机体的主要缺陷是负能量平衡。细胞因子被认为参与恶病质-厌食的发生和/或进展;白细胞介素-1、白细胞介素-6(及其亚家族成员如睫状神经营养因子和白血病抑制因子)、干扰素-γ、肿瘤坏死因子-α和脑源性神经营养因子已与各种恶病质情况相关联。争议集中在循环或其他体液(如脑脊液)中细胞因子浓度升高是否是证明细胞因子参与恶病质-厌食所必需的。然而,细胞因子也以旁分泌、自分泌和胞内分泌方式发挥作用,这些活动在循环中无法检测到。事实上,旁分泌相互作用是器官(包括大脑)内细胞因子的主要作用方式。数据表明,细胞因子可能通过在特定脑区局部产生和作用而参与恶病质-厌食过程。在癌症外周模型、外周炎症以及外周给予细胞因子期间,已显示大脑可合成细胞因子;这些数据支持脑源性细胞因子作为疾病神经和神经精神表现以及脑-外周通讯(如通过自主神经系统)的介质的作用。在恶病质-厌食综合征中值得高度关注的脑机制是那些由细胞因子、肽/神经肽和神经递质之间相互作用产生的机制。这些相互作用可能导致相加、协同或拮抗活性,并且可能涉及转导分子和细胞内介质的修饰。因此,数据表明恶病质-厌食综合征是多因素的,理解外周和脑机制之间的相互作用对于表征这种疾病潜在的综合病理生理学至关重要。