Cerebral cortical hyperactivation in response to mental stress in patients with coronary artery disease

  1. Robert Soufer*,,,
  2. J. Douglas Bremner*,
  3. James A. Arrighi*,,
  4. Ira Cohen,
  5. Barry L. Zaret,
  6. Matthew M. Burg,§, and
  7. Patricia Goldman-Rakic
  1. *Yale University/VA Positron Imaging Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 950 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, CT 06516; Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street FMP 3, New Haven, CT 06520-8017; §Section of Health Psychology, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, CT 06516; and Section of Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, P.O. Box 208001, New Haven, CT 06520-8001
  1. Contributed by Patricia Goldman-Rakic

Abstract

The central nervous system (CNS) effects of mental stress in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) are unexplored. The present study used positron emission tomography (PET) to measure brain correlates of mental stress induced by an arithmetic serial subtraction task in CAD and healthy subjects. Mental stress resulted in hyperactivation in CAD patients compared with healthy subjects in several brain areas including the left parietal cortex [angular gyrus/parallel sulcus (area 39)], left anterior cingulate (area 32), right visual association cortex (area 18), left fusiform gyrus, and cerebellum. These same regions were activated within the CAD patient group during mental stress versus control conditions. In the group of healthy subjects, activation was significant only in the left inferior frontal gyrus during mental stress compared with counting control. Decreases in blood flow also were produced by mental stress in CAD versus healthy subjects in right thalamus (lateral dorsal, lateral posterior), right superior frontal gyrus (areas 32, 24, and 10), and right middle temporal gyrus (area 21) (in the region of the auditory association cortex). Of particular interest, a subgroup of CAD patients that developed painless myocardial ischemia during mental stress had hyperactivation in the left hippocampus and inferior parietal lobule (area 40), left middle (area 10) and superior frontal gyrus (area 8), temporal pole, and visual association cortex (area 18), and a concomitant decrease in activation observed in the anterior cingulate bilaterally, right middle and superior frontal gyri, and right visual association cortex (area 18) compared with CAD patients without myocardial ischemia. These findings demonstrate an exaggerated cerebral cortical response and exaggerated asymmetry to mental stress in individuals with CAD.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Yale University/VA Positron Imaging Center, 115A, 950 Campbell Ave., West Haven, CT 06516. e-mail: Soufer.Robert{at}West-Haven.Va.Gov.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    PET,
    positron emission tomography;
    CAD,
    coronary artery disease
« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents