Lee S C, Dickson D W, Casadevall A
Department of Pathology (Neuropathology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.
Hum Pathol. 1996 Aug;27(8):839-47. doi: 10.1016/s0046-8177(96)90459-1.
In this autopsy series of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis (CME), the authors analyzed neuropathologic lesions in 13 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and 14 non-HIV-related cases. Most non-HIV patients did not have immunosuppressive predisposing illness. Analysis of pathological findings revealed significant differences in the inflammatory response to CME in patients with and without HIV infection. None of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients had granulomatous inflammation, whereas most non-HIV-associated cases had granulomas, supporting a role for cell-mediated immunity in CME. Lymphocytic infiltrate in both groups consisted of T cells (CD45RO+). In some non-HIV-associated cases, CME was undiagnosed and untreated. In most HIV-associated cases, CME had an encephalitic component, resulting in grossly or microscopically visible accumulations of fungi within the brain parenchyma, whereas in non-HIV-associated cases, CME was often confined to the subarachnoid space and large perivascular spaces (Virchow-Robin spaces). In non-HIV-associated cases, yeast forms were fewer and showed a more limited distribution. In contrast, many extracellular fungi were present in many cases of HIV-associated CME. The principal reactive cell in CME in AIDS was brain macrophages and microglia, especially those in the perivascular and juxtavascular locations. Reactive astrocytes were limited to large destructive lesions and subpial regions. In several patients with HIV-associated CME, large parenchymal cryptococcomas contained Crytococcus neoformans (CN) with cell wall pigmentation, suggestive of melanin. The authors suggest that in AIDS patients altered immune functions allow CN to accumulate within the brain, predominantly extracellularly, and that deficient macrophage/microglial effector function may be responsible for the altered pathology. In addition, coexisting CNS processes in HIV-associated CME may contribute to the altered pathology. The authors conclude that cryptococcal meningitis is not a disease limited to the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) space but affects the brain more significantly than suspected. Therapeutic strategies that enhance the effector function of glial cells at the CNS-CSF barrier may be useful for improving the response to therapy.
在这个隐球菌性脑膜脑炎(CME)尸检系列研究中,作者分析了13例人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)相关病例和14例非HIV相关病例的神经病理病变。大多数非HIV患者没有免疫抑制性易感疾病。对病理结果的分析显示,HIV感染患者和未感染患者对CME的炎症反应存在显著差异。获得性免疫缺陷综合征(AIDS)患者均无肉芽肿性炎症,而大多数非HIV相关病例有肉芽肿,这支持了细胞介导免疫在CME中的作用。两组中的淋巴细胞浸润均由T细胞(CD45RO+)组成。在一些非HIV相关病例中,CME未被诊断和治疗。在大多数HIV相关病例中,CME有脑炎成分,导致脑实质内出现肉眼或显微镜下可见的真菌聚集,而在非HIV相关病例中,CME通常局限于蛛网膜下腔和大的血管周围间隙(维氏间隙)。在非HIV相关病例中,酵母形式较少且分布更局限。相比之下,在许多HIV相关CME病例中有许多细胞外真菌。AIDS患者CME中的主要反应性细胞是脑巨噬细胞和小胶质细胞,尤其是血管周围和血管旁的细胞。反应性星形胶质细胞仅限于大的破坏性病变和软脑膜下区域。在几例HIV相关CME患者中,大的实质隐球菌瘤含有细胞壁有色素沉着的新型隐球菌(CN),提示有黑色素。作者认为,在AIDS患者中,免疫功能改变使CN在脑内聚集,主要在细胞外,巨噬细胞/小胶质细胞效应功能缺陷可能是病理改变的原因。此外,HIV相关CME中共存的中枢神经系统病变可能导致病理改变。作者得出结论,隐球菌性脑膜炎并非仅限于脑脊液(CSF)空间的疾病,对脑的影响比怀疑的更显著。增强中枢神经系统 - 脑脊液屏障处神经胶质细胞效应功能的治疗策略可能有助于改善治疗反应。