Section of Anaesthetics, Pain Medicine & Intensive Care, Department of Surgery & Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London SW10 9NH, UK.
Brain Sci. 2014 Mar 14;4(1):136-49. doi: 10.3390/brainsci4010136.
Every year millions of young people are treated with anaesthetic agents for surgery and sedation in a seemingly safe manner. However, growing and convincing preclinical evidence in rodents and nonhuman primates, together with recent epidemiological observations, suggest that exposure to anaesthetics in common clinical use can be neurotoxic to the developing brain and lead to long-term neurological sequelae. These findings have seriously questioned the safe use of general anaesthetics in obstetric and paediatric patients. The mechanisms and human applicability of anaesthetic neurotoxicity and neuroprotection have remained under intense investigation over the past decade. Ongoing pre-clinical investigation may have significant impact on clinical practice in the near future. This review represents recent developments in this rapidly emerging field. The aim is to summarise recently available laboratory data, especially those being published after 2010, in the field of anaesthetics-induced neurotoxicity and its impact on cognitive function. In addition, we will discuss recent findings in mechanisms of early-life anaesthetics-induced neurotoxicity, the role of human stem cell-derived models in detecting such toxicity, and new potential alleviating strategies.
每年都有数百万年轻人接受麻醉剂治疗手术和镇静,看起来很安全。然而,越来越多的啮齿动物和非人类灵长类动物的临床前证据,以及最近的流行病学观察结果表明,在常见的临床应用中接触麻醉剂可能对发育中的大脑有毒性,并导致长期的神经后遗症。这些发现严重质疑了全身麻醉在产科和儿科患者中的安全使用。在过去的十年中,麻醉神经毒性和神经保护的机制和人类适用性一直是激烈研究的主题。正在进行的临床前研究可能会在不久的将来对临床实践产生重大影响。这篇综述代表了这一迅速发展领域的最新进展。目的是总结最近可用的实验室数据,特别是 2010 年后发表的数据,这些数据涉及麻醉诱导的神经毒性及其对认知功能的影响。此外,我们还将讨论早期生命麻醉诱导的神经毒性的机制、人类干细胞衍生模型在检测此类毒性中的作用,以及新的潜在缓解策略。