Vanderbilt Institute for Integrative Biosystems Research and Education, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA Department of Biomedical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA.
Vanderbilt Institute for Integrative Biosystems Research and Education, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA Department of Chemistry and Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA.
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2014 Nov;239(11):1433-42. doi: 10.1177/1535370214537747. Epub 2014 Jun 5.
The human body is a complex assembly of physiological systems designed to manage the multidirectional transport of both information and nutrients. An intricate interplay between the nervous, circulatory, and secretory systems is therefore necessary to sustain life, allow delivery of nutrients and therapeutic drugs, and eliminate metabolic waste products and toxins. These systems also provide vulnerable routes for modification by substances of abuse. Addictive substances are, by definition, neurologically active, but as they and their metabolites are spread throughout the body via the nervous, circulatory, respiratory and digestive systems, there is abundant opportunity for interaction with numerous cell and tissue types. Cocaine is one such substance that exerts a broad physiological effect. While a great deal of the research concerning addiction has addressed the neurological effects of cocaine use, only a few studies have been aimed at delineating the role that cocaine plays in various body systems. In this paper, we probe the current research regarding cocaine and the immune system, and map a systems-level view to outline a broader perspective of the biological response to cocaine. Specifically, our overview of the neurological and immunomodulatory effects of the drug will allow a broader perspective of the biological response to cocaine. The focus of this review is on the connection between the nervous and immune systems and the role this connection plays in the long-term complications of cocaine use. By describing the multiplicity of these connections, we hope to inspire detailed investigations into the immunological interplay in cocaine addiction.
人体是一个复杂的生理系统集合,旨在管理信息和营养物质的多向运输。因此,神经系统、循环系统和分泌系统之间需要进行复杂的相互作用,以维持生命、输送营养物质和治疗药物,并清除代谢废物和毒素。这些系统也为滥用物质的修饰提供了脆弱的途径。根据定义,成瘾物质在神经上是活跃的,但由于它们及其代谢物通过神经系统、循环系统、呼吸系统和消化系统在体内传播,因此有大量机会与许多细胞和组织类型相互作用。可卡因就是这样一种物质,它会产生广泛的生理效应。虽然大量关于成瘾的研究都集中在可卡因使用的神经效应上,但只有少数研究旨在阐明可卡因在各种身体系统中所起的作用。在本文中,我们探讨了目前关于可卡因和免疫系统的研究,并绘制了一个系统层面的视图,以概述对可卡因的更广泛的生物学反应。具体来说,我们对该药物的神经和免疫调节作用的综述将允许更广泛地了解对可卡因的生物学反应。这篇综述的重点是神经系统和免疫系统之间的联系,以及这种联系在可卡因使用的长期并发症中所起的作用。通过描述这些联系的多样性,我们希望激发对可卡因成瘾中免疫相互作用的详细研究。