de Jongste J C, Jongejan R C, Kerrebijn K F
Department of Pediatrics, University Hospital Rotterdam/Sophia Children's Hospital, The Netherlands.
Am Rev Respir Dis. 1991 Jun;143(6):1421-6. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm/143.6.1421.
Autonomic nerves can influence airway caliber via their effects on airway smooth muscle, bronchial vessels, and mucous glands and may therefore contribute to airway narrowing in asthma or in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Human lungs receive cholinergic, noradrenergic, and peptidergic efferents and several types of afferents. Cholinergic nerve activity contributes to airway narrowing both in asthma and in COPD. Reflex vagal activity may be enhanced because of epithelial damage and exposition of sensory nerve endings to nonspecific irritants. Other possible mechanisms include defects in prejunctional receptors that inhibit acetylcholine release, several postjunctional factors that nonspecifically enhance the effect of a given degree of cholinergic muscle contraction on airway caliber, and interactions between inflammatory mediators and the cholinergic system. The main direct bronchodilating nerve activity in human lungs is nonadrenergic, and scanty data suggest that nonadrenergic inhibitory nerve activity may be variably reduced in asthmatics. Human airway muscle virtually lacks adrenergic innervation, but adrenergic nerves may influence airway caliber by acting on bronchial vessels, mucous glands, and parasympathetic nerves and ganglia. The response of asthmatic airways to beta-agonists seems intrinsically normal, but it may be reduced during severe asthma attacks. There are no convincing data that abnormal adrenergic control is present in the airways of patients with COPD. The physiologic relevance of excitatory neuropeptides in sensory nerves in human airways is uncertain. Tachykinins have proinflammatory and spasmogenic properties and are therefore of potential interest as a factor in the pathogenesis of obstructive airway disease. In conclusion, the data presently available support an abnormal autonomic control of the airways in asthma but not in COPD.
自主神经可通过对气道平滑肌、支气管血管和黏液腺的作用来影响气道口径,因此可能在哮喘或慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)中导致气道狭窄。人类肺部接受胆碱能、去甲肾上腺素能和肽能传出神经以及几种类型的传入神经。胆碱能神经活动在哮喘和COPD中均导致气道狭窄。由于上皮损伤以及感觉神经末梢暴露于非特异性刺激物,迷走神经反射活动可能增强。其他可能的机制包括抑制乙酰胆碱释放的节前受体缺陷、几种非特异性增强一定程度胆碱能肌肉收缩对气道口径影响的节后因素,以及炎症介质与胆碱能系统之间的相互作用。人类肺部主要的直接支气管舒张神经活动是非肾上腺素能的,少量数据表明非肾上腺素能抑制性神经活动在哮喘患者中可能会有不同程度的降低。人类气道平滑肌实际上缺乏肾上腺素能神经支配,但肾上腺素能神经可通过作用于支气管血管、黏液腺以及副交感神经和神经节来影响气道口径。哮喘气道对β受体激动剂的反应似乎本质上是正常的,但在严重哮喘发作期间可能会降低。没有令人信服的数据表明COPD患者气道存在异常的肾上腺素能控制。人类气道感觉神经中兴奋性神经肽的生理相关性尚不确定。速激肽具有促炎和致痉特性,因此作为阻塞性气道疾病发病机制中的一个因素具有潜在意义。总之,目前可得的数据支持哮喘患者气道存在自主神经控制异常,但COPD患者不存在。