Watkins Crystal C, Andrews Sarah Ramsay
Memory Center in Neuropsychiatry, Sheppard Pratt Health Systems, Baltimore, MD, United States; Department of Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287, United States.
Schizophr Res. 2016 Sep;176(1):14-22. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.018. Epub 2015 Jul 30.
Schizophrenia is a pervasive neurodevelopmental disorder that appears to result from genetic and environmental factors. Although the dopamine hypothesis is the driving theory behind the majority of translation research in schizophrenia, emerging evidence suggests that aberrant immune mechanisms in the peripheral and central nervous system influence the etiology of schizophrenia and the pathophysiology of psychotic symptoms that define the illness. The initial interest in inflammatory processes comes from epidemiological data and historical observations, dating back several decades. A growing body of research on developmental exposure to infection, stress-induced inflammatory response, glial cell signaling, structural and functional brain changes and therapeutic trials demonstrates the impact that inflammation has on the onset and progression of schizophrenia. Research in animal models of psychosis has helped to advance clinical and basic science investigations of the immune mechanisms disrupted in schizophrenia. However, they are limited by the inability to recapitulate the human experience of hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder that define psychosis. To date, translational studies of inflammatory mechanisms in human subjects have not been reviewed in great detail. Here, we critically review clinical studies that focus on inflammatory mechanisms in schizophrenia. Understanding the neuroinflammatory mechanisms involved in schizophrenia may be essential in identifying potential therapeutic targets to minimize the morbidity and mortality of schizophrenia by interrupting disease development.
精神分裂症是一种普遍存在的神经发育障碍,似乎由遗传和环境因素导致。尽管多巴胺假说在精神分裂症的大多数转化研究背后起着主导作用,但新出现的证据表明,外周和中枢神经系统中异常的免疫机制会影响精神分裂症的病因以及界定该疾病的精神病性症状的病理生理学。对炎症过程的最初兴趣源于几十年前的流行病学数据和历史观察。越来越多关于发育过程中暴露于感染、应激诱导的炎症反应、胶质细胞信号传导、大脑结构和功能变化以及治疗试验的研究表明,炎症对精神分裂症的发病和进展有影响。对精神病动物模型的研究有助于推进对精神分裂症中免疫机制紊乱的临床和基础科学研究。然而,它们受到无法重现定义精神病的幻觉、妄想和思维障碍的人类体验的限制。迄今为止,尚未对人类受试者炎症机制的转化研究进行详细综述。在此,我们对专注于精神分裂症炎症机制的临床研究进行批判性综述。了解精神分裂症中涉及的神经炎症机制对于确定潜在治疗靶点可能至关重要,通过中断疾病发展来尽量减少精神分裂症的发病率和死亡率。