Kiyatkin Eugene A
Behavioral Neuroscience Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse - Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2018;157:483-504. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-64074-1.00030-6.
Brain temperature is a physiologic parameter that depends on metabolism-related intracerebral heat production and heat loss by cerebral circulation to the rest of the body and then to the external environment. Despite the importance of temperature as a metabolism-related parameter and a factor affecting neural activity and function, it is generally believed that brain temperature is a tightly regulated and highly stable homeostatic parameter. To challenge this view, we present data on fluctuations in brain temperature occurring in rats following exposure to various arousing stimuli and during different behaviors and discuss their mechanisms. Since most psychoactive drugs affect brain metabolism and vascular tone, thereby altering heat production and heat loss, we consider changes in brain temperature induced by several types of psychoactive drugs. Our focus here is on several widely used drugs of abuse (i.e., cocaine, heroin, methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)), which are used by humans at widely varying doses and often under conditions of psychophysiologic activation and in environments limiting natural heat loss. In contrast to physiologic brain hyperthermia that has a clear adaptive significance, drug-induced hyperthermia can reach pathologic levels, resulting in irreversible damage of brain cells, profound leakage of the blood-brain barrier, and multiple functional perturbations that can, in certain instances, be incompatible with life. We also discuss the complexities of considering brain temperature within the frameworks of physiologic regulation and homeostasis. While different adaptive mechanisms could, within some limits, compensate for an altered heat balance of the brain, real-life challenges often create situations where this balance cannot be adequately compensated for, resulting in acute life-threatening health complications and chronic neuropathology.
脑温是一个生理参数,它取决于与代谢相关的脑内热产生以及通过脑循环向身体其他部位继而向外部环境的散热。尽管温度作为与代谢相关的参数以及影响神经活动和功能的一个因素很重要,但人们普遍认为脑温是一个受到严格调节且高度稳定的稳态参数。为了挑战这一观点,我们展示了大鼠在暴露于各种唤醒刺激后以及在不同行为期间脑温波动的数据,并讨论了其机制。由于大多数精神活性药物会影响脑代谢和血管张力,从而改变产热和散热,我们考虑了几种类型的精神活性药物引起的脑温变化。我们这里关注的是几种广泛使用的滥用药物(即可卡因、海洛因、3,4-亚甲基二氧甲基苯丙胺(摇头丸)),人类使用这些药物的剂量差异很大,且通常是在心理生理激活的情况下以及在限制自然散热的环境中使用。与具有明确适应性意义的生理性脑热不同,药物诱导的热可能达到病理水平,导致脑细胞不可逆转的损伤、血脑屏障的严重渗漏以及多种功能紊乱,在某些情况下可能危及生命。我们还讨论了在生理调节和稳态框架内考虑脑温的复杂性。虽然不同的适应性机制在一定限度内可以补偿脑热平衡的改变,但现实生活中的挑战往往会造成这种平衡无法得到充分补偿的情况,从而导致急性危及生命的健康并发症和慢性神经病理学问题。