Departments of Pathology (Neuropathology), Neurology, and Medicine, Rhode Island Hospital and the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, 55 Claverick Street, Room 419, Providence, RI, 02903, USA,
Acta Neuropathol. 2014 Jan;127(1):71-90. doi: 10.1007/s00401-013-1233-3. Epub 2013 Dec 27.
Alcohol-related diseases of the nervous system are caused by excessive exposures to alcohol, with or without co-existing nutritional or vitamin deficiencies. Toxic and metabolic effects of alcohol (ethanol) vary with brain region, age/developmental stage, dose, and duration of exposures. In the mature brain, heavy chronic or binge alcohol exposures can cause severe debilitating diseases of the central and peripheral nervous systems, and skeletal muscle. Most commonly, long-standing heavy alcohol abuse leads to disproportionate loss of cerebral white matter and impairments in executive function. The cerebellum (especially the vermis), cortical-limbic circuits, skeletal muscle, and peripheral nerves are also important targets of chronic alcohol-related metabolic injury and degeneration. Although all cell types within the nervous system are vulnerable to the toxic, metabolic, and degenerative effects of alcohol, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and synaptic terminals are major targets, accounting for the white matter atrophy, neural inflammation and toxicity, and impairments in synaptogenesis. Besides chronic degenerative neuropathology, alcoholics are predisposed to develop severe potentially life-threatening acute or subacute symmetrical hemorrhagic injury in the diencephalon and brainstem due to thiamine deficiency, which exerts toxic/metabolic effects on glia, myelin, and the microvasculature. Alcohol also has devastating neurotoxic and teratogenic effects on the developing brain in association with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder/fetal alcohol syndrome. Alcohol impairs function of neurons and glia, disrupting a broad array of functions including neuronal survival, cell migration, and glial cell (astrocytes and oligodendrocytes) differentiation. Further progress is needed to better understand the pathophysiology of this exposure-related constellation of nervous system diseases and better correlate the underlying pathology with in vivo imaging and biochemical lesions.
酒精相关的神经系统疾病是由过度暴露于酒精引起的,无论是否存在共存的营养或维生素缺乏。酒精(乙醇)的毒性和代谢作用因大脑区域、年龄/发育阶段、剂量和暴露时间而异。在成熟的大脑中,大量慢性或 binge 酒精暴露会导致中枢和周围神经系统以及骨骼肌严重的衰弱性疾病。最常见的是,长期大量饮酒会导致大脑白质不成比例地丧失和执行功能受损。小脑(特别是蚓部)、皮质边缘回路、骨骼肌和周围神经也是慢性酒精相关代谢损伤和变性的重要靶标。尽管神经系统内的所有细胞类型都容易受到酒精的毒性、代谢和退行性影响,但星形胶质细胞、少突胶质细胞和突触末端是主要靶标,导致白质萎缩、神经炎症和毒性以及突触发生受损。除了慢性退行性神经病理学外,由于硫胺素缺乏,酗酒者易发生严重的、潜在危及生命的急性或亚急性对称性脑丘和脑干出血性损伤,这种损伤对神经胶质、髓鞘和微血管具有毒性/代谢作用。酒精还会对发育中的大脑造成严重的神经毒性和致畸作用,与胎儿酒精谱系障碍/胎儿酒精综合征有关。酒精会损害神经元和神经胶质的功能,破坏包括神经元存活、细胞迁移和神经胶质细胞(星形胶质细胞和少突胶质细胞)分化在内的广泛功能。需要进一步的研究来更好地理解这种与暴露相关的神经系统疾病的病理生理学,并更好地将潜在的病理学与体内成像和生化损伤相关联。