School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142 New Zealand.
School of Pharmacy, University of Otago, New Zealand.
Neurotoxicology. 2020 Mar;77:20-28. doi: 10.1016/j.neuro.2019.12.006. Epub 2019 Dec 5.
Animal studies have consistently observed neuronal death following methamphetamine (MA) administration, however, these have not been systematically reviewed. This systematic review aims to present the evidence for MA-induced neuronal death in animals (rodents) and identify the regions affected. Locating the brain regions in which neuronal death occurs in animal studies will provide valuable insight into the linkage between MA consumption and the structural alterations observed in the human brain. The data were collected from three databases: Scopus, Ovid, and the Web of Science. Thirty-seven studies met the inclusion criteria and were divided into two sub-groups, i.e. acute and repeated administration. Twenty-six (of 27) acute and ten (of 11) repeated administration studies observed neuronal death. A meta-analysis was not possible due to different variables between studies, i.e. species, treatment regimens, withdrawal periods, methods of quantification, and regions studied. Acute MA treatment induced neuronal death in the frontal cortex, striatum, and substantia nigra, but not in the hippocampus, whereas repeated MA administration led to neuronal loss in the hippocampus, frontal cortex, and striatum. In addition, when animals self-administered the drug, neuronal death was observed at much lower doses than the doses administered by experimenters. There is some overlap in the regions where neuronal death occurred in animals and the identified regions from human studies. For instance, gray matter deficits have been observed in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus of MA users. The findings presented in this review implicate that not only does MA induce neuronal death in animals, but it also damages the same regions affected in human users. Despite the inter-species differences, animal studies have contributed significantly to addiction research, and are still of great assistance for future research with a more relevant model of compulsive drug use in humans.
动物研究一直观察到 methamphetamine(MA)给药后神经元死亡,但这些研究尚未进行系统综述。本系统综述旨在呈现 MA 诱导动物(啮齿动物)神经元死亡的证据,并确定受影响的区域。在动物研究中确定发生神经元死亡的脑区,将为 MA 消耗与人类大脑中观察到的结构改变之间的联系提供有价值的见解。数据来自三个数据库:Scopus、Ovid 和 Web of Science。符合纳入标准的 37 项研究分为两组,即急性和重复给药。26 项(27 项中的 26 项)急性和 10 项(11 项中的 10 项)重复给药研究观察到神经元死亡。由于研究之间存在不同的变量,如物种、治疗方案、戒断期、定量方法和研究区域,因此无法进行荟萃分析。急性 MA 处理诱导前额叶皮层、纹状体和黑质中的神经元死亡,但海马体中没有,而重复 MA 给药导致海马体、前额叶皮层和纹状体中的神经元丢失。此外,当动物自行给药时,与实验者给药的剂量相比,观察到的神经元死亡所需的剂量要低得多。动物中发生神经元死亡的区域与从人类研究中确定的区域存在一些重叠。例如,MA 使用者的前额叶皮层和海马体出现灰质缺陷。本综述中提出的研究结果表明,MA 不仅在动物中诱导神经元死亡,而且还损害了人类使用者中受影响的相同区域。尽管存在种间差异,但动物研究对成瘾研究做出了重大贡献,并且对于未来使用更相关的人类强迫性药物使用模型的研究仍然非常有帮助。