脊髓损伤后功能恢复的药理学方法。

David Parker
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引用次数: 12

摘要

运动源于脊髓神经网络的活动,它与感觉输入和下行输入一起产生协调的运动输出。下行输入包括谷氨酸能、单胺能和肽能途径。脊髓损伤阻断了这些下行通路,导致功能中断或丧失。针对这些内源性递质系统的药物已被用于改善脊髓损伤后的功能。然而,在不同的研究中,个别药物可能有有益或有害的影响,因此在最佳的药理学策略上几乎没有共识。这种可变性可能受到病变类型(完全或部分)、损伤后时间或缺乏针对特定递质系统的特异性配体所引起的变化的影响。现在认识到,这些递质系统不一定孤立地起作用,但可以相互作用以引起加性,抑制性或新的元调节作用。Meta相互作用意味着受损脊髓中不同的化学环境可能影响药物作用。脊髓也表现出损伤引起的变化,这可能随着时间的推移改变化学环境和功能特性。虽然在脊髓损伤的药理学方法中尚未考虑到它们,但相互作用和适应性变化可能影响脊髓病变和治疗干预的效果。需要了解脊髓病变前后脊髓运动网络中内源性递质系统的特性,并且需要开发针对特定功能方面的药理学工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pharmacological approaches to functional recovery after spinal injury.

Locomotion results from the activity in neural networks in the spinal cord that together with sensory and descending inputs generate coordinated motor outputs. Descending inputs include glutamatergic, monoaminergic, and peptidergic pathways. Spinal injuries interrupt these descending pathways, resulting in the disruption or loss of function. Drugs that target these endogenous transmitter systems have been used to improve function after spinal injury. However, individual drugs can have beneficial or deleterious effects in different studies and thus there is little consensus on optimal pharmacological strategies. The variability may be influenced by changes introduced by the type of lesion (complete or partial), time after injury, or the lack of specific ligands that target specific transmitter systems. It is now recognised that these transmitter systems do not necessarily act in isolation, but can interact to evoke additive, inhibitory, or novel metamodulatory effects. Meta interactions mean that differing chemical environments in lesioned spinal cords could influence drug effects. The spinal cord also exhibits injury-induced changes, which could alter the chemical environment and functional properties over time. While they have not been considered in pharmacological approaches to spinal injury, interactive and adaptive changes could influence the effects of spinal lesions and therapeutic interventions. The properties of endogenous transmitter systems in spinal locomotor networks before and after spinal lesions need to be understood, and pharmacological tools that target specific functional aspects need to be developed.

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