Fuggle Nicholas R, Howe Franklyn A, Allen Rachel L, Sofat Nidhi
Institute of Infection and Immunity, St. George's University London, UK.
Neuroscience Research Centre, Institute of Cardiovascular and Cell Sciences, St. George's University London, UK.
Front Neurosci. 2014 Nov 6;8:357. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00357. eCollection 2014.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is considered to be, in many respects, an archetypal autoimmune disease that causes activation of pro-inflammatory pathways resulting in joint and systemic inflammation. RA remains a major clinical problem with the development of several new therapies targeted at cytokine inhibition in recent years. In RA, biologic therapies targeted at inhibition of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) have been shown to reduce joint inflammation, limit erosive change, reduce disability and improve quality of life. The cytokine TNFα has a central role in systemic RA inflammation and has also been shown to have pro-inflammatory effects in the brain. Emerging data suggests there is an important bidirectional communication between the brain and immune system in inflammatory conditions like RA. Recent work has shown how TNF inhibitor therapy in people with RA is protective for Alzheimer's disease. Functional MRI studies to measure brain activation in people with RA to stimulus by finger joint compression, have also shown that those who responded to TNF inhibition showed a significantly greater activation volume in thalamic, limbic, and associative areas of the brain than non-responders. Infections are the main risk of therapies with biologic drugs and infections have been shown to be related to disease flares in RA. Recent basic science data has also emerged suggesting that bacterial components including lipopolysaccharide induce pain by directly activating sensory neurons that modulate inflammation, a previously unsuspected role for the nervous system in host-pathogen interactions. In this review, we discuss the current evidence for neuro-inflammation as an important factor that impacts on disease persistence and pain in RA.
类风湿性关节炎(RA)在许多方面被认为是一种典型的自身免疫性疾病,它会导致促炎途径的激活,从而引发关节和全身炎症。近年来,随着几种针对细胞因子抑制的新疗法的出现,RA仍然是一个主要的临床问题。在RA中,针对抑制肿瘤坏死因子α(TNFα)的生物疗法已被证明可以减轻关节炎症、限制侵蚀性变化、减少残疾并改善生活质量。细胞因子TNFα在全身性RA炎症中起核心作用,并且在大脑中也显示出具有促炎作用。新出现的数据表明,在RA等炎症性疾病中,大脑和免疫系统之间存在重要的双向通信。最近的研究表明,RA患者接受TNF抑制剂治疗对阿尔茨海默病具有保护作用。通过手指关节压迫刺激来测量RA患者大脑激活的功能磁共振成像研究还表明,与无反应者相比,那些对TNF抑制有反应的患者在大脑丘脑、边缘和联合区域的激活体积明显更大。感染是生物药物治疗的主要风险,并且已证明感染与RA中的疾病发作有关。最近的基础科学数据也表明,包括脂多糖在内的细菌成分通过直接激活调节炎症的感觉神经元来诱导疼痛,这是神经系统在宿主-病原体相互作用中以前未被怀疑的作用。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了神经炎症作为影响RA疾病持续和疼痛的重要因素的当前证据。