Literature DB >> 11054608

Central nervous system mechanisms contributing to the cachexia-anorexia syndrome.

C R Plata-Salamán1.   

Abstract

The cachexia-anorexia syndrome occurs in chronic pathophysiologic processes including cancer, infection with human immunodeficiency virus, bacterial and parasitic diseases, inflammatory bowel disease, liver disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Cachexia makes an organism susceptible to secondary pathologies and can result in death. Cachexia-anorexia may result from pain, depression or anxiety, hypogeusia and hyposmia, taste and food aversions, chronic nausea, vomiting, early satiety, malfunction of the gastrointestinal system (delayed digestion, malabsorption, gastric stasis and associated delayed emptying, and/or atrophic changes of the mucosa), metabolic shifts, cytokine action, production of substances by tumor cells, and/or iatrogenic causes such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The cachexia-anorexia syndrome also involves metabolic and immune changes (mediated by either the pathophysiologic process, i.e., tumor, or host-derived chemical factors, e.g., peptides, neurotransmitters, cytokines, and lipid-mobilizing factors) and is associated with hypertriacylglycerolemia, lipolysis, and acceleration of protein turnover. These changes result in the loss of fat mass and body protein. Increased resting energy expenditure in weight-losing cachectic patients can occur despite the reduced dietary intake, indicating a systemic dysregulation of host metabolism. During cachexia, the organism is maintained in a constant negative energy balance. This can rarely be explained by the actual energy and substrate demands by tumors in patients with cancer. Overall, the cachectic profile is significantly different than that observed during starvation. Cachexia may result not only from anorexia and a decreased caloric intake but also from malabsorption and losses from the body (ulcers, hemorrhage, effusions). In any case, the major deficit of a cachectic organism is a negative energy balance. Cytokines are proposed to participate in the development and/or progression of cachexia-anorexia; interleukin-1, interleukin-6 (and its subfamily members such as ciliary neurotrophic factor and leukemia inhibitory factor), interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor have been associated with various cachectic conditions. Controversy has focused on the requirement of increased cytokine concentrations in the circulation or other body fluids (e.g., cerebrospinal fluid) to demonstrate cytokine involvement in cachexia-anorexia. Cytokines, however, also act in paracrine, autocrine, and intracrine manners, activities that cannot be detected in the circulation. In fact, paracrine interactions represent a predominant cytokine mode of action within organs, including the brain. Data show that cytokines may be involved in cachectic-anorectic processes by being produced and by acting locally in specific brain regions. Brain synthesis of cytokines has been shown in peripheral models of cancer, peripheral inflammation, and during peripheral cytokine administration; these data support a role for brain cytokines as mediators of neurologic and neuropsychiatric manifestations of disease and in the brain-to-peripheral communication (e.g., through the autonomic nervous system). Brain mechanisms that merit significant attention in the cachexia-anorexia syndrome are those that result from interactions among cytokines, peptides/neuropeptides, and neurotransmitters. These interactions could result in additive, synergistic, or antagonistic activities and can involve modifications of transducing molecules and intracellular mediators. Thus, the data show that the cachexia-anorexia syndrome is multifactorial, and understanding the interactions between peripheral and brain mechanisms is pivotal to characterizing the underlying integrative pathophysiology of this disorder.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11054608     DOI: 10.1016/s0899-9007(00)00413-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutrition        ISSN: 0899-9007            Impact factor:   4.008


  37 in total

1.  Critical weight loss in head and neck cancer--prevalence and risk factors at diagnosis: an explorative study.

Authors:  Harriët Jager-Wittenaar; Pieter U Dijkstra; Arjan Vissink; Bernard F A M van der Laan; Rob P van Oort; Jan L N Roodenburg
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2007-02-03       Impact factor: 3.603

2.  How does immune challenge inhibit ingestion of palatable food? Evidence that systemic lipopolysaccharide treatment modulates key nodal points of feeding neurocircuitry.

Authors:  Su-Mi Park; Ron P A Gaykema; Lisa E Goehler
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2008-06-17       Impact factor: 7.217

Review 3.  Anorexia in cancer: role of feeding-regulatory peptides.

Authors:  Simona Perboni; Akio Inui
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2006-07-29       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 4.  Pre-treatment effects of peripheral tumors on brain and behavior: neuroinflammatory mechanisms in humans and rodents.

Authors:  Andrew Schrepf; Susan K Lutgendorf; Leah M Pyter
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2015-05-06       Impact factor: 7.217

5.  TRANSLATION OF BRAIN ACTIVITY INTO SLEEP.

Authors:  James M Krueger
Journal:  Hirosaki Igaku       Date:  2012

6.  Neural controls of prostaglandin 2 pyrogenic, tachycardic, and anorexic actions are anatomically distributed.

Authors:  Karolina P Skibicka; Amber L Alhadeff; Theresa M Leichner; Harvey J Grill
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2011-03-29       Impact factor: 4.736

7.  Paradoxical surrogate markers of dental injury-induced pain in the mouse.

Authors:  Jennifer L Gibbs; Rochelle Urban; Allan I Basbaum
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2013-04-11       Impact factor: 6.961

8.  Regulation of agouti-related protein messenger ribonucleic acid transcription and peptide secretion by acute and chronic inflammation.

Authors:  Jarrad M Scarlett; Xinxia Zhu; Pablo J Enriori; Darren D Bowe; Ayesha K Batra; Peter R Levasseur; Wilmon F Grant; Michael M Meguid; Michael A Cowley; Daniel L Marks
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2008-06-26       Impact factor: 4.736

Review 9.  Inflammatory Cytokines and Antipsychotic-Induced Weight Gain: Review and Clinical Implications.

Authors:  Trehani M Fonseka; Daniel J Müller; Sidney H Kennedy
Journal:  Mol Neuropsychiatry       Date:  2016-01-08

10.  Plasma MIC-1 correlates with systemic inflammation but is not an independent determinant of nutritional status or survival in oesophago-gastric cancer.

Authors:  R J E Skipworth; D A C Deans; B H L Tan; K Sangster; S Paterson-Brown; D A Brown; M Hunter; S N Breit; J A Ross; K C H Fearon
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2010-01-26       Impact factor: 7.640

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