Learning more about that role could provide insight into diagnosing and treating everything from the stomach flu to rheumatoid arthritis, researchers believe.
Researchers at St Michael's Hospital in Toronto, in conjunction with the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, reviewed the latest, most vigorous pre-clinical trials on this topic in a commentary published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
They noted that neurons of the peripheral nervous system - specialised nerve cells that transmit information throughout the body - are known to send information about local infections or inflammation to the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord) so the CNS can co-ordinate the whole body response.
Basic science researchers are now trying to decipher the "neural code" of information being sent by neurons.
Since messages are being sent from neurons to the CNS in real time, knowing what they're saying could speed diagnoses or prognostication, which would be especially important in pandemics or outbreaks of particularly contagious or deadly diseases, such as flu, Ebola or SARS.
