| Literature DB >> 27716334 |
Xin Sun1,2, Zachary B Jones3, Xiao-Ming Chen4, Libing Zhou5,6, Kwok-Fai So5,6, Yi Ren7,8,9.
Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating event that results in significant physical disabilities for affected individuals. Apart from local injury within the spinal cord, SCI patients develop a variety of complications characterized by multiple organ dysfunction or failure. These disorders, such as neurogenic pain, depression, lung injury, cardiovascular disease, liver damage, kidney dysfunction, urinary tract infection, and increased susceptibility to pathogen infection, are common in injured patients, hinder functional recovery, and can even be life threatening. Multiple lines of evidence point to pathological connections emanating from the injured spinal cord, post-injury systemic inflammation, and immune suppression as important multifactorial mechanisms underlying post-SCI complications. SCI triggers systemic inflammatory responses marked by increased circulation of immune cells and pro-inflammatory mediators, which result in the infiltration of inflammatory cells into secondary organs and persistence of an inflammatory microenvironment that contributes to organ dysfunction. SCI also induces immune deficiency through immune organ dysfunction, resulting in impaired responsiveness to pathogen infection. In this review, we summarize current evidence demonstrating the relevance of inflammatory conditions and immune suppression in several complications frequently seen following SCI. In addition, we highlight the potential pathways by which inflammatory and immune cues contribute to multiple organ failure and dysfunction and discuss current anti-inflammatory approaches used to alleviate post-SCI complications. A comprehensive review of this literature may provide new insights into therapeutic strategies against complications after SCI by targeting systemic inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: Immune depression syndrome; Multiple organ dysfunction; Post-injury infection; Spinal cord injury; Systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716334 PMCID: PMC5053065 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-016-0736-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of systemic inflammation- and immune depression-associated multiple organ dysfunction following SCI. SCI triggers an acute increase of inflammatory cells (such as neutrophils and macrophages) in the circulation and elevates serum concentrations of pro-inflammatory mediators. Subsequent infiltration of inflammatory cells from the blood into secondary organs initiates a series of events that mediate inflammatory responses in these organs. Activation of resident immune cells (microglia) in the brain is also found after SCI. SCI itself interrupts innervation of immune organs by the sympathetic nervous system, causing immune depression syndrome. Suppressed immunity leads to an increased susceptibility of the whole body to post-injury pathogen infections through decreased immune cell quantities (such as monocytes, T cells, and B cells)