Abstract

In multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, fatigue is rated as one of the most common and disabling symptoms. However, the pathophysiology underlying this fatigue is not yet clear. Several lines of evidence suggest that immunological factors, such as elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, may contribute to subjective fatigue in MS patients. Pro-inflammatory cytokines represent primary mediators of immune-to-brain-communication, modulating changes in the neurophysiology of the central nervous system. Recently, we proposed a model arguing that fatigue in MS patients is a subjective feeling, which is related to inflammation. Moreover, it implies that fatigue can be measured behaviorally only by applying specific cognitive tasks related to alertness and vigilance. In the present review, we focus on the subjective feeling of MS-related fatigue. We examine the hypothesis that the subjective feeling of MS-related fatigue may be a variant of inflammation-induced sickness behavior, resulting from cytokine-mediated activity changes within brain areas involved in interoception and homeostasis including the insula, the anterior cingulate, and the hypothalamus. We first present studies demonstrating a relationship between pro-inflammatory cytokines and subjective fatigue in healthy individuals, in people with inflammatory disorders, and particularly in MS patients. Subsequently, we discuss studies analyzing the impact of anti-inflammatory treatment on fatigue. In the next part of this review, we present studies on the transmission and neural representation of inflammatory signals, with a special focus on possible neural concomitants of inflammation-induced fatigue. We also present two of our studies on the relationship between local gray and white matter atrophy and fatigue in MS patients. Finally, we discuss some implications of our findings and future perspectives.

Highlights

  • In multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, fatigue is rated as one of the most common and disabling symptoms

  • We focus on the first aspect, namely the explanation of fatigue as a subjective feeling resulting from inflammation

  • THE POSSIBLE ROLE OF THE INSULA, THE ANTERIOR CINGULATE AND THE HYPOTHALAMUS IN THE GENERATION OF INFLAMMATION-RELATED SUBJECTIVE FATIGUE Assuming that subjective fatigue is a feeling represented in cortical areas that are involved in interoception and homeostasis, we take a closer look at the brain regions that have been found frequently to be implicated in inflammation: the insula, the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and the hypothalamus

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Summary

Introduction

In multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, fatigue is rated as one of the most common and disabling symptoms. We hypothesize that the subjective feeling of MS-related fatigue may be a variant of inflammation-induced sickness behavior, resulting from cytokine-mediated activity changes within brain areas involved in interoception and homeostasis including the insula, the anterior cingulate, and the hypothalamus.

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