Developmental Exposure Alcohol Research Center, Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, Binghamton, NY, USA.
Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina.
Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse. 2023 May 4;49(3):269-282. doi: 10.1080/00952990.2023.2201944. Epub 2023 May 6.
The last decade has witnessed a surge of findings implicating neuroinflammatory processes as pivotal players in substance use disorders. The directionality of effects began with the expectation that the neuroinflammation associated with prolonged substance misuse contributes to long-term neuropathological consequences. As the literature grew, however, it became evident that the interactions between neuroinflammatory processes and alcohol and drug intake were reciprocal and part of a pernicious cycle in which disease-relevant signaling pathways contributed to an escalation of drug intake, provoking further inflammation-signaling and thereby exacerbating the neuropathological effects of drug misuse. The goal of this review and its associated special issue is to provide an overview of the emergent findings relevant to understanding these reciprocal interactions. The review highlights the importance of preclinical and clinical studies in testing and validation of immunotherapeutics as viable targets for curtailing substance use and misuse, with a focus on alcohol misuse. A narrative review of the literature on drug and neuroinflammation was conducted, as well as articles published in this Special Issue on . We argue that (a) demographic variables and genetic background contribute unique sensitivity to drug-related neuroinflammation; (b) co-morbidities between substance use disorders and affect dysfunction may share common inflammation-related signatures that predict the efficacy of immunotherapeutic drugs; and (c) examination of polydrug interactions with neuroinflammation is a critical area where greater research emphasis is needed. This review provides an accessible and example-driven review of the relationship between drug misuse, neuroinflammatory processes, and their resultant neuropathological outcomes.
过去十年的研究发现,神经炎症过程是物质使用障碍的关键因素。这种影响的方向性始于这样一种期望,即与长期物质滥用相关的神经炎症会导致长期的神经病理后果。然而,随着文献的增多,很明显,神经炎症过程与酒精和药物摄入之间的相互作用是相互的,是一个恶性循环的一部分,其中与疾病相关的信号通路导致药物摄入的增加,引发进一步的炎症信号,从而加剧药物滥用的神经病理效应。本综述及其相关特刊的目的是提供一个概述,了解这些相互作用的新兴发现。该综述强调了临床前和临床研究在测试和验证免疫疗法作为减少物质使用和滥用的可行靶点的重要性,重点是酒精滥用。对药物和神经炎症的文献进行了叙述性综述,以及发表在这个特刊上的文章。我们认为:(a)人口统计学变量和遗传背景对与药物相关的神经炎症有独特的敏感性;(b)物质使用障碍和情感功能障碍之间的共病可能具有共同的炎症相关特征,可预测免疫治疗药物的疗效;(c)检查神经炎症与多药物相互作用是一个需要更多研究关注的关键领域。这篇综述提供了一个易于理解和示例驱动的综述,讨论了药物滥用、神经炎症过程及其导致的神经病理结果之间的关系。