School of Biochemistry and Immunology & Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Brain Behav Immun. 2013 Feb;28:1-13. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2012.07.012. Epub 2012 Aug 3.
Delirium is a common and severe neuropsychiatric syndrome characterised by acute deterioration and fluctuations in mental status. It is precipitated mainly by acute illness, trauma, surgery, or drugs. Delirium affects around one in eight hospital inpatients and is associated with multiple adverse consequences, including new institutionalisation, worsening of existing dementia, and death. Patients with delirium show attentional and other cognitive deficits, altered alertness (mostly reduced, but some patients develop agitation and hyperactivity), altered sleep-wake cycle and psychoses. The pathways from the various aetiologies to the heterogeneous clinical presentations are hardly studied and are poorly understood. One of the key questions, which research is only now beginning to address, is how the factors determining susceptibility interact with the stimuli that trigger delirium. Inflammatory signals arising during systemic infection evoke sickness behaviour, a coordinated set of adaptive changes initiated by the host to respond to, and to counteract, infection. It is now clear that the same systemic inflammatory signals can have severe deleterious effects on brain function when occuring in old age or in the presence of neurodegenerative disease. Multiple animal studies now show that even mild acute systemic inflammation can induce exaggerated sickness behaviour responses and cognitive dysfunction in aged animals or those with prior degenerative pathology when compared to young and/or healthy controls. These findings appear highly promising in understanding aspects of delirium. In this review our aim is to describe and assess the parallels between exaggerated sickness behaviour in vulnerable animals and delirium in older humans. We discuss inflammatory and stress-related triggers of delirium in the context of new animal models that allow us to dissect some aspects of the mechanisms underpinning these episodes. We discuss some differences between the sickness behaviour syndrome model and delirium in the context of the complexity in the latter due to other factors such as prior pathology, psychological stress and drug effects. We conclude that, with appropriate caveats, the study of sickness behaviour in the vulnerable brain offers a promising route to uncover the mechanisms of this common and serious unmet medical need.
谵妄是一种常见且严重的神经精神综合征,其特征为精神状态急性恶化和波动。它主要由急性疾病、创伤、手术或药物引起。谵妄影响约八分之一的住院患者,并与多种不良后果相关,包括新的机构化、现有痴呆症的恶化和死亡。谵妄患者表现出注意力和其他认知缺陷、警觉度改变(大多数为降低,但有些患者出现激越和多动)、睡眠-觉醒周期改变和精神病。从各种病因到异质临床表现的途径几乎没有研究,也理解得很差。现在研究才刚刚开始解决的一个关键问题是,决定易感性的因素如何与引发谵妄的刺激相互作用。全身感染时产生的炎症信号会引发疾病行为,这是宿主为应对和对抗感染而启动的一组协调的适应性变化。现在很清楚,当发生在老年或存在神经退行性疾病时,相同的全身炎症信号会对大脑功能产生严重的有害影响。现在有多项动物研究表明,即使是轻度的急性全身炎症,也会在与年轻和/或健康对照组相比时,在老年动物或有先前退行性病变的动物中引起过度的疾病行为反应和认知功能障碍。这些发现对于理解谵妄的某些方面似乎非常有希望。在这篇综述中,我们的目的是描述和评估脆弱动物中过度疾病行为与老年人谵妄之间的相似之处。我们讨论了在新的动物模型背景下,导致谵妄的炎症和应激相关触发因素,这些模型使我们能够剖析这些发作背后的一些机制。我们还讨论了疾病行为综合征模型与谵妄之间的一些差异,鉴于后者的复杂性,除了其他因素(如先前的病变、心理压力和药物作用)之外。我们的结论是,在脆弱的大脑中研究疾病行为提供了一个有希望的途径,可以揭示这种常见且严重的未满足医疗需求的机制。