医学
神经炎症
炎症
冲程(发动机)
创伤性脑损伤
背景(考古学)
疾病
神经科学
重症监护医学
免疫学
病理
精神科
心理学
工程类
古生物学
生物
机械工程
作者
Henrik Hagberg,Carina Mallard,Donna M. Ferriero,Susan J. Vannucci,Steven W. Levison,Zinaida S. Vexler,Pierre Gressèns
标识
DOI:10.1038/nrneurol.2015.13
摘要
Neuroinflammation during critical phases of brain development can increase the risk of neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders, even in adulthood. In this Review, Hagberg et al. review the mechanisms through which inflammation can exacerbate perinatal brain injury, and outline how understanding the interplay between inflammation and brain injury can aid the identification of new strategies to alleviate neurological and neuropsychiatric morbidity. Inflammation is increasingly recognized as being a critical contributor to both normal development and injury outcome in the immature brain. The focus of this Review is to highlight important differences in innate and adaptive immunity in immature versus adult brain, which support the notion that the consequences of inflammation will be entirely different depending on context and stage of CNS development. Perinatal brain injury can result from neonatal encephalopathy and perinatal arterial ischaemic stroke, usually at term, but also in preterm infants. Inflammation occurs before, during and after brain injury at term, and modulates vulnerability to and development of brain injury. Preterm birth, on the other hand, is often a result of exposure to inflammation at a very early developmental phase, which affects the brain not only during fetal life, but also over a protracted period of postnatal life in a neonatal intensive care setting, influencing critical phases of myelination and cortical plasticity. Neuroinflammation during the perinatal period can increase the risk of neurological and neuropsychiatric disease throughout childhood and adulthood, and is, therefore, of concern to the broader group of physicians who care for these individuals.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI