Keyoung H Michael, Goldman Steven A
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, 505 Parnassus Avenue, M779, PO Box 0470, San Francisco, CA 94143-0470, USA.
Neurosurg Clin N Am. 2007 Jan;18(1):93-104, x. doi: 10.1016/j.nec.2006.10.009.
Demyelinating diseases of the brain and spinal cord affect more than one-quarter million of Americans, with numbers reaching more than two million across the world. These patients experience not only the vascular, traumatic, and inflammatory demyelinations of adulthood but the congenital and childhood dysmyelinating syndromes of the pediatric leukodystrophies. Several disease-modifying strategies have been developed that slow disease progression, especially in the inflammatory demyelinations and in multiple sclerosis in particular. Yet, currently available disease modifiers typically influence the immune system and are neither intended to nor competent to reverse the structural neurologic damage attending acquired demyelination. Fortunately, however, the disorders of myelin lend themselves well to attempts at structural repair, because central oligodendrocytes are the primary, and often sole, victims of the underlying disease process. Given the relative availability and homogeneity of human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells, the disorders of myelin formation and maintenance may be especially compelling targets for cell-based neurologic therapy.
脑和脊髓的脱髓鞘疾病影响着超过25万美国人,全球范围内这一数字超过200万。这些患者不仅经历成年期的血管性、创伤性和炎性脱髓鞘,还经历小儿脑白质营养不良的先天性和儿童期髓鞘形成障碍综合征。已经开发出几种改善病情的策略来减缓疾病进展,尤其是在炎性脱髓鞘疾病中,特别是在多发性硬化症中。然而,目前可用的病情改善药物通常影响免疫系统,既无意也无能力逆转获得性脱髓鞘伴随的结构性神经损伤。幸运的是,髓鞘疾病很适合进行结构修复尝试,因为中枢少突胶质细胞是潜在疾病过程的主要且通常是唯一的受害者。鉴于人类少突胶质细胞祖细胞相对容易获得且具有同质性,髓鞘形成和维持障碍可能是基于细胞的神经治疗特别有吸引力的靶点。