Rouveix B
Département de Pharmacologie Clinique, INSERM U.13, Paris.
Therapie. 1992 Nov;47(6):503-12.
There is an increasingly body of evidence, obtained both in vitro and in vivo, showing that exogenous opioids have a variety of effects on cells of the immune system. The consequence is that opiates at pharmacological concentrations suppress cell-mediated immunity, as reflected by depressed T-dependent antibody production by B lymphocytes, altered T lymphocyte functions such as proliferation, delayed-type hypersensitivity, graft-versus-host responses and decreased cytotoxic NK cell activity. The macrophage/monocyte oxidative burst and phagocytosis are also impaired, effects probably mediated by various opioid receptor types as they are blocked or reversed by naloxone, an opioid antagonist. Other possible mechanisms of interaction remain to be elucidated: exogenous opioids can act on neurons of the central nervous system, thereby activating the neuroendocrine system with a subsequent increase in serum glucocorticoid levels. Another potential link between the central nervous system and lymphoid tissue is the sympathetic nervous system, via which opioid-induced activation could result in noradrenergic inhibition of the immune system. The clinical consequences of these suppressive effects on the immune system are seen in the striking increase in the incidence of infections in intravenous opioid addicts. The advent of AIDS and the identification of intravenous drug abusers as a critical risk group have propelled interest in this area. Data obtained both in vitro and in vivo with various experimental models shows that morphine increases susceptibility to bacterial and viral infections, the latter effect possibly being related to a depressive effect of opioids on gamma-interferon levels. The dosage and time of administration strongly influence the results: it appears that chronic opioid treatment in vivo induces a state of immune tolerance, with normal resistance to viral infections, whereas short or single administration has a detrimental effect. In the former context, other factors such as a morphine-induced increase in CD4+ cell numbers may tend to enhance the infectivity of HIV-infected subjects.
越来越多的体外和体内证据表明,外源性阿片类药物对免疫系统细胞有多种影响。结果是,药理浓度的阿片类药物会抑制细胞介导的免疫,这表现为B淋巴细胞依赖T细胞的抗体产生受到抑制,T淋巴细胞功能改变,如增殖、迟发型超敏反应、移植物抗宿主反应,以及细胞毒性NK细胞活性降低。巨噬细胞/单核细胞的氧化爆发和吞噬作用也受到损害,这些作用可能由各种阿片受体类型介导,因为它们会被阿片拮抗剂纳洛酮阻断或逆转。其他可能的相互作用机制仍有待阐明:外源性阿片类药物可作用于中枢神经系统的神经元,从而激活神经内分泌系统,随后血清糖皮质激素水平升高。中枢神经系统与淋巴组织之间的另一个潜在联系是交感神经系统,阿片类药物通过该系统诱导的激活可能导致免疫系统的去甲肾上腺素能抑制。这些对免疫系统的抑制作用的临床后果在静脉注射阿片类药物成瘾者感染发生率的显著增加中可见。艾滋病的出现以及将静脉注射吸毒者确定为关键风险群体推动了对该领域的关注。在各种实验模型中获得的体外和体内数据表明,吗啡会增加对细菌和病毒感染的易感性,后一种作用可能与阿片类药物对γ-干扰素水平的抑制作用有关。给药剂量和时间强烈影响结果:似乎体内慢性阿片类药物治疗会诱导免疫耐受状态,对病毒感染具有正常抵抗力,而短期或单次给药则有有害影响。在前一种情况下,其他因素,如吗啡诱导的CD4 +细胞数量增加,可能会增强HIV感染受试者的传染性。