Kiyatkin Eugene A
Cellular Neurobiology Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse-Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, DHHS, 5500 Nathan Shock, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Brain Res Brain Res Rev. 2005 Dec 1;50(1):27-56. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresrev.2005.04.001.
Although brain metabolism consumes high amounts of energy and is accompanied by intense heat production, brain temperature is usually considered a stable, tightly "regulated" homeostatic parameter. Current research, however, revealed relatively large and rapid brain temperature fluctuations (3-4 degrees C) in animals during various normal, physiological, and behavioral activities at stable ambient temperatures. This review discusses these data and demonstrates that physiological brain hyperthermia has an intra-brain origin, resulting from enhanced neural metabolism and increased intra-brain heat production. Therefore, brain temperature is an important physiological parameter that both reflects alterations in metabolic neural activity and affects various neural functions. This work also shows that brain hyperthermia may be induced by various drugs of abuse that cause metabolic brain activation and impair heat dissipation. While individual drugs (i.e., heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, MDMA) have specific, dose-dependent effects on brain and body temperatures, these effects are strongly modulated by an individual's activity state and environmental conditions, and change dramatically during the development of drug self-administration. Thus, brain thermorecording may provide new information on the central effects of various addictive drugs, drug-activity-environment interactions in mediating drugs' adverse effects, and alterations in metabolic neural activity associated with the development of drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior. While ambient temperatures and impairment of heat dissipation may also affect brain temperature, these environmental conditions strongly potentiate thermal effects of psychomotor stimulant drugs, resulting in pathological brain overheating. Since hyperthermia exacerbates drug-induced toxicity and is destructive to neural cells and brain functions, use of these drugs under activated conditions that restrict heat loss may pose a significant health risk, resulting in both acute life-threatening complications and chronic destructive CNS changes.
尽管大脑新陈代谢消耗大量能量并伴随着强烈的产热,但大脑温度通常被认为是一个稳定的、受到严格“调节”的稳态参数。然而,当前研究表明,在稳定的环境温度下,动物在各种正常、生理和行为活动期间,大脑温度会出现相对较大且快速的波动(3-4摄氏度)。本综述讨论了这些数据,并表明生理性大脑体温过高源于大脑内部,是神经代谢增强和脑内产热增加的结果。因此,大脑温度是一个重要的生理参数,既能反映神经代谢活动的变化,又能影响各种神经功能。这项研究还表明,各种滥用药物可能会诱发大脑体温过高,这些药物会导致大脑代谢激活并损害散热功能。虽然个别药物(如海洛因、可卡因、甲基苯丙胺、摇头丸)对大脑和体温有特定的、剂量依赖性的影响,但这些影响会受到个体活动状态和环境条件的强烈调节,并且在药物自我给药过程中会发生显著变化。因此,大脑温度记录可能会提供有关各种成瘾药物的中枢效应、药物-活动-环境相互作用在介导药物不良反应中的作用,以及与觅药和服药行为发展相关的神经代谢活动变化的新信息。虽然环境温度和散热障碍也可能影响大脑温度,但这些环境条件会强烈增强精神运动性兴奋药物的热效应,导致病理性大脑过热。由于体温过高会加剧药物诱导的毒性,并对神经细胞和大脑功能造成破坏,在限制热量散失的激活条件下使用这些药物可能会带来重大健康风险,导致急性危及生命的并发症和慢性破坏性中枢神经系统变化。