Targeting Microglial Polarization to Improve TBI Outcomes

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Targeting Microglial Polarization to Improve TBI Outcomes
المؤلفون: Christopher N. Chin, Sai P. Polineni, Shoji Yokobori, Helene Clervius, Quesada S.L. Maria, Fernandez Legnay, Shyam Gajavelli, Walter J. Jermakowicz, Lucas Rego, Daniela Fawcett, Lee Sw-T, Matti Nathalie, Anil K. Mahavadi
المصدر: CNSneurological disorders drug targets. 20(3)
سنة النشر: 2020
مصطلحات موضوعية: 0301 basic medicine, medicine.medical_specialty, Traumatic brain injury, Inflammation, Neuroprotection, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, medicine, Animals, Humans, Young adult, Intensive care medicine, Disease burden, Neuroinflammation, Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Pharmacology, business.industry, Mechanism (biology), General Neuroscience, Macrophages, Macrophage Activation, medicine.disease, nervous system diseases, Disease Models, Animal, 030104 developmental biology, Neuroprotective Agents, Blood-Brain Barrier, Neuroinflammatory Diseases, Microglia, medicine.symptom, business, 030217 neurology & neurosurgery, Signal Transduction
الوصف: Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is still the worldwide leading cause of mortality and morbidity in young adults. Improved safety measures and advances in critical care have increased chances of surviving a TBI, however, numerous secondary mechanisms contribute to the injury in the weeks and months that follow TBI. The past 4 decades of research have addressed many of the metabolic impairments sufficient to mitigate mortality, however, an enduring secondary mechanism, i.e. neuroinflammation, has been intractable to current therapy. Neuroinflammation is particularly difficult to target with pharmacological agents due to lack of specificity, the blood brain barrier, and an incomplete understanding of the protective and pathologic influences of inflammation in TBI. Recent insights into TBI pathophysiology have established microglial activation as a hallmark of all types of TBI. The inflammatory response to injury is necessary and beneficial while the death of activated microglial is not. This review presents new insights on the therapeutic and maladaptive features of the immune response after TBI with an emphasis on microglial polarization, followed by a discussion of potential targets for pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic treatments. In aggregate, this review presents a rationale for guiding TBI inflammation towards neural repair and regeneration rather than secondary injury and degeneration, which we posit could improve outcomes and reduce lifelong disease burden in TBI survivors.
تدمد: 1996-3181
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::aec2149f9e29cc1e2232465912342727
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32951588
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....aec2149f9e29cc1e2232465912342727
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE