Brown M, Mawa P A, Kaleebu P, Elliott A M
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Parasite Immunol. 2006 Nov;28(11):613-23. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3024.2006.00904.x.
Parasitic helminths have co-evolved with the mammalian immune system. Current hypotheses suggest that immunological stimulation in the presence of helminths is balanced by immuno-regulation and by the broad spectrum of mechanisms possessed by helminths for countering the host immune response. The degree to which this balance is perfected, and the mechanisms by which this is achieved, vary between helminth species; we suggest that this is reflected not only in the degree of pathology induced by helminths but also in a variety of relationships with HIV infection and HIV disease. Available epidemiological data regarding interactions between helminths and HIV are largely observational; results are variable and generally inconclusive. Well designed, controlled intervention studies are required to provide definitive information on the species-specific nature of these interactions and on the advantages, disadvantages and optimal timing of de-worming in relation to HIV infection.
寄生性蠕虫与哺乳动物免疫系统共同进化。目前的假说认为,在蠕虫存在的情况下,免疫刺激通过免疫调节以及蠕虫所拥有的对抗宿主免疫反应的广泛机制而达到平衡。这种平衡完善的程度以及实现平衡的机制在不同蠕虫种类之间各不相同;我们认为,这不仅体现在蠕虫诱发的病理程度上,还体现在与HIV感染及HIV疾病的多种关系中。关于蠕虫与HIV相互作用的现有流行病学数据大多是观察性的;结果各不相同且通常无定论。需要设计良好的对照干预研究,以提供关于这些相互作用的物种特异性本质,以及驱虫相对于HIV感染的利弊和最佳时机的确切信息。