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Subject: where is manhasset?
Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 06:23:10 +0000
Let's go talk to these crazies! They are also neurosurgeons...
[PS: More Vagus! Check it out]
How The Immune System And Brain Communicate To
Control Disease
In a major step in understanding how the nervous system and the immune system interact,
scientists at The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research have identified a new anatomical path
through which the brain and the spleen communicate.
The spleen, once thought to be an unnecessary bit of tissue, is now regarded as an organ where important information from
the nervous reaches the immune system. Understanding this process could ultimately lead to treatments that target the spleen
to send the right message when fighting human disease.
Mauricio Rosas-Ballina, MD, working with colleagues in the laboratory of Kevin J. Tracey, MD, figured out that macrophages in
the spleen were making tumor necrosis factor, a powerful inflammation-producing molecule. When they stimulated the vagus
nerve, a long nerve that goes from the base of the brain into thoracic and abdominal organs, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
production in the spleen decreased. This study complements previous research performed in Dr. Tracey's laboratory, which
showed that stimulation of the vagus nerve increases survival in laboratory models of sepsis.
The findings were published July 22 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Many laboratories at The
Feinstein Institute study the immune system in health and in disease. Every year, about 500,000 people develop severe
sepsis, a syndrome triggered when the body's immune system wages an attack on the body that is well beyond its normal
response to an invader. Sepsis kills about 225,000 deaths in the United States each year.
A hundred years ago, the spleen (located in the upper quadrant of the abdomen) was thought to be only reservoir for blood. It
has only been in recent years that scientists discovered that the spleen is a manufacturing plant for immune cells, and a site
where immune cells and nerves interact. The spleen defends the body against infection, particularly encapsulated bacteria
that circulate through the blood.
The hope is to modulate other immune functions like antibody production through the spleen (via vagus nerve stimulation) as
a way to modify the course of infections and possibly some autoimmune disorders.
Dr. Rosas-Ballina began following the winding path of the vagus nerve to establish the route it follows to reach the spleen. He
was trying, without much luck, to find fibers of the vagus nerve in this organ. And then he went a little further south to the
splenic nerve, the nerve that innervates the spleen. Their results indicate that the vagus nerve inherently communicates with
the splenic nerve to suppress TNF production by macrophages in the spleen.
According to the prevailing paradigm, the autonomic nervous system is anatomically and functionally divided in sympathetic
and parasympathetic branches, which act in opposition to regulate organ function. "The division between the parasympathetic
and sympathetic nervous systems is not clear cut; said Dr. Rosas-Ballina, explaining that the vagus nerve (the major
parasympathetic nerve) acts through the splenic nerve to modulate immune function. He said that results of this study suggest
that there may be two separate ways the brain communicates with the spleen to regulate immune function. This points the
way to a possible solution for treating sepsis. It may be more effective to take advantage of the central nervous system to
control cells of the spleen. This way, "you know where the treatment is going," said Dr. Rosas-Ballina.
EFTA00757733
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