Brain structural changes associated with aberrant functional responses to the Valsalva maneuver in heart failure.
Xiaopeng SongBhaswati RoyGregg C FonarowMary A WooRajesh KumarPublished in: Journal of neuroscience research (2019)
Heart failure (HF) patients show inability to regulate autonomic functions in response to autonomic challenges. The autonomic deficits may stem from brain tissue injury in central autonomic regulatory areas, resulting from ischemic and hypoxic processes accompanying the condition. However, the direct evaluation of correlations between brain structural injury and functional timing and magnitude of neural signal patterns within affected areas, which may lead to impaired autonomic outflow, is unclear. In this study, we evaluate neural responses to the Valsalva maneuver with blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging in 29 HF patients and 35 control subjects and brain structural changes using diffusion tensor imaging-based mean diffusivity in a subsample of 19 HF and 24 control subjects. HF showed decreased neural activation in multiple autonomic and motor control areas, including cerebellum cortices, vermis, left insular, left putamen, and bilateral postcentral gyrus. Structural brain changes emerged in similar autonomic, as well as cognitive and mood regulation areas. Functional MRI responses in cerebellum and insula in HF subjects are delayed or decreased in magnitude to the challenge. The impaired functional responses of insular and cerebellar sites are correlated with the severity of tissue changes. These results indicate that the functions of insular and cerebellar regions, sites that are involved in autonomic regulation, are compromised, and that autonomic deficits in these areas have brain structural basis for impaired functions. Our study enhanced our understanding of brain structural and functional alterations underlying impaired autonomic regulations in HF subjects.
Keyphrases
- heart rate variability
- heart rate
- resting state
- heart failure
- white matter
- functional connectivity
- acute heart failure
- cerebral ischemia
- end stage renal disease
- traumatic brain injury
- blood pressure
- structural basis
- multiple sclerosis
- peritoneal dialysis
- depressive symptoms
- bipolar disorder
- oxidative stress
- patient reported