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Published online on April 9, 2007, 10.1073/pnas.0609509104

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Neuroscience
A cortical potential reflecting cardiac function

( afferent homeostatic feedback | electroencephalography | heart beat-evoked potential | insula cortex | ischemia )

Marcus A. Gray *{dagger}, Peter Taggart {ddagger}, Peter M. Sutton {ddagger}, David Groves {sect}, Diana R. Holdright ¶, David Bradbury *, David Brull ||, and Hugo D. Critchley *,**

*Functional Imaging Laboratory, Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience, Institute of Neurology, University College London, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom; {ddagger}The Hatter Cardiovascular Institute, Division of Medicine, Royal Free and University College Medical School, 67 Chenies Mews, London WC1E 6HX, United Kingdom; {sect}National Refractory Angina Centre, Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospital, NHS Trust, Thomas Drive, Liverpool L14 3PE, United Kingdom; The Heart Hospital, University College London Hospitals, 16-18 Westmoreland Street, London W1G 8PH, United Kingdom; ||The Whittington Hospital, NHS Trust Hospitals, Highgate Hill, London N19 5NF, United Kingdom; and **Department of Psychiatry, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 6PX, United Kingdom

Edited by Marcus E. Raichle, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, and approved March 1, 2007 (received for review October 26, 2006)

Emotional trauma and psychological stress can precipitate cardiac arrhythmia and sudden death through arrhythmogenic effects of efferent sympathetic drive. Patients with preexisting heart disease are particularly at risk. Moreover, generation of proarrhythmic activity patterns within cerebral autonomic centers may be amplified by afferent feedback from a dysfunctional myocardium. An electrocortical potential reflecting afferent cardiac information has been described, reflecting individual differences in interoceptive sensitivity (awareness of one's own heartbeats). To inform our understanding of mechanisms underlying arrhythmogenesis, we extended this approach, identifying electrocortical potentials corresponding to the cortical expression of afferent information about the integrity of myocardial function during stress. We measured changes in cardiac response simultaneously with electroencephalography in patients with established ventricular dysfunction. Experimentally induced mental stress enhanced cardiovascular indices of sympathetic activity (systolic blood pressure, heart rate, ventricular ejection fraction, and skin conductance) across all patients. However, the functional response of the myocardium varied; some patients increased, whereas others decreased, cardiac output during stress. Across patients, heartbeat-evoked potential amplitude at left temporal and lateral frontal electrode locations correlated with stress-induced changes in cardiac output, consistent with an afferent cortical representation of myocardial function during stress. Moreover, the amplitude of the heartbeat-evoked potential in the left temporal region reflected the proarrhythmic status of the heart (inhomogeneity of left ventricular repolarization). These observations delineate a cortical representation of cardiac function predictive of proarrhythmic abnormalities in cardiac repolarization. Our findings highlight the dynamic interaction of heart and brain in stress-induced cardiovascular morbidity.


Author contributions: M.A.G., P.T., P.M.S., D.G., and H.D.C. designed research; M.A.G., P.T., and D. Bradbury performed research; M.A.G., D.R.H., D. Bradbury, and D. Brull analyzed data; and M.A.G., P.T., and H.D.C. wrote the paper.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

{dagger}To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Marcus A. Gray, E-mail: M.A.Gray{at}bsms.ac.uk

www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0609509104
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