Sant G R, Theoharides T C
Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Tufts University School of Medicine, New England Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Urol Clin North Am. 1994 Feb;21(1):41-53.
The bladder mast cell contains many granules, each of which can secrete many vasoactive and nociceptive molecules. A number of conditions, such as extreme cold, drugs, neuropeptides, stress, trauma, and toxins, can trigger the mast cell to secrete some of its contents; they, in turn, can sensitize sensory neurons, which can further activate mast cells by releasing neurotransmitters or neuropeptides. Additionally, the mast cell can directly cause vasodilation and bladder mucosa damage while also attracting inflammatory cells, thus causing many of the problems seen in interstitial cystitis. The mast cell appears to be involved in the pathogenesis of interstitial cystitis. Although it is not pathognomonic of the disease, mastocytosis does occur in a significant subset of interstitial cystitis patients. Because interstitial cystitis is now regarded as a syndrome caused by multiple factors, it is conceivable that one cause of interstitial cystitis is associated with bladder mastocytosis and mast cell activation. The fact that mast cells are also increased in patients with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder does not diminish the importance of mastocytosis in interstitial cystitis, because the mast cells are not activated in carcinoma but are activated in interstitial cystitis. Perhaps the common strand between these two bladder diseases is the putative allergens/carcinogens in bladder urine that breach the protective lining of the bladder and then elicit an immune response in the bladder wall. Furthermore, the majority of patients with a history of bladder tumors receive multiple courses of intravesical chemotherapy (such as thiotepa) or immunotherapy (bacille Calmette-Guerin), and it is possible that these agents damage the bladder lining or provoke an inflammation in the bladder wall. The theory of a defective/deficient bladder glycosaminoglycan layer in interstitial cystitis is also consonant with this putative chain of events in the pathogenesis of interstitial cystitis. Thus these two theories interstitial cystitis causation--a glycosaminoglycan deficiency and bladder mastocytosis--may well operate in concert to cause bladder inflammation and the symptoms of interstitial cystitis. Clinicians may be at a distinct disadvantage because they are faced with a multitude of potential mast cell triggers and numerous mediators secreted. It may, therefore, be advisable to block or inhibit the mast cell from responding to many of these various stimuli. Specific mast cell mediators should be assayed as possible diagnostic tools, and potential mast cell inhibitors should be tried under controlled conditions to determine the extent of therapeutic benefit.
膀胱肥大细胞含有许多颗粒,每个颗粒都能分泌多种血管活性和伤害性分子。许多情况,如极度寒冷、药物、神经肽、压力、创伤和毒素等,都能触发肥大细胞分泌其部分内容物;这些物质进而会使感觉神经元敏感化,而感觉神经元又可通过释放神经递质或神经肽进一步激活肥大细胞。此外,肥大细胞可直接导致血管舒张和膀胱黏膜损伤,同时还会吸引炎症细胞,从而引发间质性膀胱炎中出现的许多问题。肥大细胞似乎参与了间质性膀胱炎的发病机制。虽然它并非该疾病的特异性表现,但肥大细胞增多症确实在相当一部分间质性膀胱炎患者中出现。由于间质性膀胱炎现在被认为是一种由多种因素引起的综合征,所以可以想象间质性膀胱炎的一个病因与膀胱肥大细胞增多症和肥大细胞激活有关。膀胱移行细胞癌患者的肥大细胞也增多这一事实,并不降低肥大细胞增多症在间质性膀胱炎中的重要性,因为在癌症中肥大细胞未被激活,而在间质性膀胱炎中则被激活。也许这两种膀胱疾病之间的共同线索是膀胱尿液中假定的过敏原/致癌物,它们突破膀胱的保护内膜,进而在膀胱壁引发免疫反应。此外,大多数有膀胱肿瘤病史的患者接受多疗程膀胱内化疗(如噻替哌)或免疫治疗(卡介苗),这些药物有可能损害膀胱内膜或引发膀胱壁炎症。间质性膀胱炎中膀胱糖胺聚糖层缺陷/不足的理论也与间质性膀胱炎发病机制中的这一假定事件链相符。因此,间质性膀胱炎病因的这两种理论——糖胺聚糖缺乏和膀胱肥大细胞增多症——很可能共同作用导致膀胱炎症和间质性膀胱炎的症状。临床医生可能处于明显的劣势,因为他们面临众多潜在的肥大细胞触发因素和大量分泌的介质。因此,阻断或抑制肥大细胞对许多这些不同刺激的反应可能是可取的。应检测特定的肥大细胞介质作为可能的诊断工具,并在可控条件下尝试使用潜在的肥大细胞抑制剂,以确定治疗益处的程度。