Content area

Abstract

Acute spinal cord injury (SCI) causes systemic immunosuppression and life-threatening infections, thought to result from noradrenergic overactivation and excess glucocorticoid release via hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis stimulation. Instead of consecutive hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activation, we report that acute SCI in mice induced suppression of serum norepinephrine and concomitant increase in cortisol, despite suppressed adrenocorticotropic hormone, indicating primary (adrenal) hypercortisolism. This neurogenic effect was more pronounced after high-thoracic level (Th1) SCI disconnecting adrenal gland innervation, compared with low-thoracic level (Th9) SCI. Prophylactic adrenalectomy completely prevented SCI-induced glucocorticoid excess and lymphocyte depletion but did not prevent pneumonia. When adrenalectomized mice were transplanted with denervated adrenal glands to restore physiologic glucocorticoid levels, the animals were completely protected from pneumonia. These findings identify a maladaptive sympathetic-neuroendocrine adrenal reflex mediating immunosuppression after SCI, implying that therapeutic normalization of the glucocorticoid and catecholamine imbalance in SCI patients could be a strategy to prevent detrimental infections.

Details

Title
Spinal cord injury-induced immunodeficiency is mediated by a sympathetic-neuroendocrine adrenal reflex
Author
Prüss, Harald; Tedeschi, Andrea; Thiriot, Aude; Lynch, Lydia; Loughhead, Scott M; Stutte, Susanne; Mazo, Irina B; Kopp, Marcel A; Brommer, Benedikt; Blex, Christian; Geurtz, Laura-christin; Liebscher, Thomas; Niedeggen, Andreas; Dirnagl, Ulrich; Bradke, Frank; Volz, Magdalena S; Devivo, Michael J; Chen, Yuying; Von Andrian, Ulrich H; Schwab, Jan M
Pages
1549-1559
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Nov 2017
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10976256
e-ISSN
15461726
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1958571995
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Nov 2017