Clinic for Geriatric Medicine, Center for Geriatric Medicine and Rehabilitation, Kantonsspital Baselland, Bruderholz, Switzerland.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Inselspital, University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Crit Care. 2024 Mar 7;28(1):71. doi: 10.1186/s13054-024-04855-w.
It has been convincingly demonstrated in recent years that isolated acute brain injury (ABI) may cause severe dysfunction of peripheral extracranial organs and systems. Of all potential target organs and systems, the lung appears to be the most vulnerable to damage after ABI. The pathophysiology of the bidirectional brain-lung interactions is multifactorial and involves inflammatory cascades, immune suppression, and dysfunction of the autonomic system. Indeed, the systemic effects of inflammatory mediators in patients with ABI create a systemic inflammatory environment ("first hit") that makes extracranial organs vulnerable to secondary procedures that enhance inflammation, such as mechanical ventilation (MV), surgery, and infections ("second hit"). Moreover, accumulating evidence supports the knowledge that gut microbiota constitutes a critical superorganism and an organ on its own, potentially modifying various physiological functions of the host. Furthermore, experimental and clinical data suggest the existence of a communication network among the brain, gastrointestinal tract, and its microbiome, which appears to regulate immune responses, gastrointestinal function, brain function, behavior, and stress responses, also named the "gut-microbiome-brain axis." Additionally, recent research evidence has highlighted a crucial interplay between the intestinal microbiota and the lungs, referred to as the "gut-lung axis," in which alterations during critical illness could result in bacterial translocation, sustained inflammation, lung injury, and pulmonary fibrosis. In the present work, we aimed to further elucidate the pathophysiology of acute lung injury (ALI) in patients with ABI by attempting to develop the "double-hit" theory, proposing the "triple-hit" hypothesis, focused on the influence of the gut-lung axis on the lung. Particularly, we propose, in addition to sympathetic hyperactivity, blast theory, and double-hit theory, that dysbiosis and intestinal dysfunction in the context of ABI alter the gut-lung axis, resulting in the development or further aggravation of existing ALI, which constitutes the "third hit."
近年来,人们已经令人信服地证明,孤立性急性脑损伤(ABI)可能导致颅外周围器官和系统严重功能障碍。在所有潜在的靶器官和系统中,肺部似乎是 ABI 后最易受损的器官。脑-肺双向相互作用的病理生理学是多因素的,涉及炎症级联反应、免疫抑制和自主神经系统功能障碍。事实上,ABI 患者中炎症介质的全身效应会产生全身性炎症环境(“第一次打击”),使颅外器官容易受到增强炎症的继发性程序的影响,如机械通气(MV)、手术和感染(“第二次打击”)。此外,越来越多的证据支持这样一种观点,即肠道微生物群构成了一个关键的超级器官和自身器官,有可能改变宿主的各种生理功能。此外,实验和临床数据表明,大脑、胃肠道及其微生物群之间存在着一种通讯网络,这种通讯网络似乎调节免疫反应、胃肠道功能、大脑功能、行为和应激反应,也被称为“肠-微生物群-脑轴”。此外,最近的研究证据强调了肠道微生物群和肺部之间的关键相互作用,称为“肠-肺轴”,在危重病期间的改变可能导致细菌易位、持续炎症、肺损伤和肺纤维化。在本研究中,我们旨在通过尝试建立“双打击”理论,提出“三击”假说,进一步阐明 ABI 患者急性肺损伤(ALI)的病理生理学,重点关注肠-肺轴对肺部的影响。特别地,我们提出,除了交感神经亢进、爆炸理论和双打击理论之外,ABI 背景下的菌群失调和肠道功能障碍改变了肠-肺轴,导致现有的 ALI 发展或进一步加重,这构成了“第三次打击”。