评论:生命早期接触异氟醚会改变非人灵长类幼年动物的静息状态功能连接性--神经炎症的作用?

Journal of immunological sciences Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-17 DOI:10.29245/2578-3009/2024/2.1255
Viola Neudecker, Jose F Perez-Zoghbi, Ansgar M Brambrink
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引用次数: 0

摘要

动物实验表明,婴幼儿在早期接触麻醉后可能会出现长期的神经行为障碍,这引起了人们对麻醉诱发婴幼儿发育神经毒性(AIDN)的关注。虽然最初的临床研究结果并不明确,但最近对儿童进行的前瞻性评估表明,早期麻醉暴露与日后行为改变之间存在关联。临床研究中的伦理限制和混杂因素给建立直接因果关系和研究其机制带来了挑战。本文对最近在非人灵长类动物(NHPs)中进行的一项研究进行了评论,重点探讨了神经炎症和大脑功能连接的改变在生命早期接触麻醉后行为障碍中的作用。在幼年NHPs中,杏仁核中的慢性星形胶质细胞增多与该区域与大脑其他区域之间的功能连接改变以及行为障碍相关,这表明了AIDN的潜在机制。尽管这项研究存在局限性,但这些发现强调了进一步研究的必要性,即通过更大规模的队列研究来证实这些关联,并确定神经炎症与早期麻醉暴露相关的行为改变之间的因果关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Commentary: Early-in-life Isoflurane Exposure Alters Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Juvenile Non-human Primates - a Role for Neuroinflammation?

The concern about anesthesia-induced developmental neurotoxicity (AIDN) in infants and young children arises from animal studies indicating potential long-term neurobehavioral impairments following early-in-life anesthesia exposure. While initial clinical studies provided ambiguous results, recent prospective assessments in children indicate associations between early-in-life anesthesia exposure and later behavioral alterations. Ethical constraints and confounding factors in clinical studies pose challenges in establishing a direct causal link and in investigating its mechanisms. This commentary on a recent study in non-human primates (NHPs) focuses on exploring the role of neuroinflammation and alterations in brain functional connectivity in the behavioral impairments following early-in-life anesthesia exposure. In juvenile NHPs, chronic astrogliosis in the amygdala correlates with alterations in functional connectivity between this area with other regions of the brain and with the behavioral impairments, suggesting a potential mechanism for AIDN. Despite acknowledging the study's limitations, these findings emphasize the need for further research with larger cohorts to confirm these associations and to establish a causal link between the neuroinflammation and the behavioral alterations associated with early-in-life anesthesia exposure.

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