| Literature DB >> 25207649 |
Sonia Pellissier1, Cécile Dantzer2, Laurie Mondillon3, Candice Trocme4, Anne-Sophie Gauchez4, Véronique Ducros4, Nicolas Mathieu5, Bertrand Toussaint6, Alicia Fournier3, Frédéric Canini7, Bruno Bonaz8.
Abstract
Crohn's disease (CD) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) involve brain-gut dysfunctions where vagus nerve is an important component. The aim of this work was to study the association between vagal tone and markers of stress and inflammation in patients with CD or IBS compared to healthy subjects (controls). The study was performed in 73 subjects (26 controls, 21 CD in remission and 26 IBS patients). The day prior to the experiment, salivary cortisol was measured at 8:00 AM and 10:00 PM. The day of the experiment, subjects completed questionnaires for anxiety (STAI) and depressive symptoms (CES-D). After 30 min of rest, ECG was recorded for heart rate variability (HRV) analysis. Plasma cortisol, epinephrine, norepinephrine, TNF-alpha and IL-6 were measured in blood samples taken at the end of ECG recording. Compared with controls, CD and IBS patients had higher scores of state-anxiety and depressive symptomatology. A subgroup classification based on HRV-normalized high frequency band (HFnu) as a marker of vagal tone, showed that control subjects with high vagal tone had significantly lower evening salivary cortisol levels than subjects with low vagal tone. Such an effect was not observed in CD and IBS patients. Moreover, an inverse association (r = -0.48; p<0.05) was observed between the vagal tone and TNF-alpha level in CD patients exclusively. In contrast, in IBS patients, vagal tone was inversely correlated with plasma epinephrine (r = -0.39; p<0.05). No relationship was observed between vagal tone and IL-6, norepinephrine or negative affects (anxiety and depressive symptomatology) in any group. In conclusion, these data argue for an imbalance between the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis and the vagal tone in CD and IBS patients. Furthermore, they highlight the specific homeostatic link between vagal tone and TNF-alpha in CD and epinephrine in IBS and argue for the relevance of vagus nerve reinforcement interventions in those diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25207649 PMCID: PMC4160179 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0105328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The experimental design.
Socio-demographic and psycho-immunologic data of the healthy control subjects, Crohn’s disease (CD) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients who participated to the study.
| Controls | Crohn’sDisease (CD) | Irritable BowelSyndrome (IBS) | p value | |
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| 26 | 21 | 26 | |
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| 36±10 | 40±11 | 38±11 | NS CD or IBS vs controls |
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| 8/18 | 9/12 | 7/19 | |
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| 23±3.5 | 22±4.3 | 22±5.2 | NS CD or IBS vs controls |
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| - | 13.4 (1–28) | 10.3 (1–31) | |
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| L1B1: n = 3 | ||||
| L1B2: n = 3 | ||||
| B1pB3: n = 1 | ||||
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| L2B1: n = 6 | ||||
| L2B1pB3: n = 2 | ||||
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| L3B1: n = 2 | ||||
| L3B2: n = 2 | ||||
| L3B2pB3: n = 2 | ||||
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| <4 | <5 | <5 | NS CD or IBS vs controls |
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| 0.30±0.34 | 1.28±0.38 | 2.19±0.34 | IBS vs controls p<0.001 |
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| 31±1.90 | 39±2.15 | 41±1.91 | CD vs controls p<0.05; IBS vs controls p<0.001 |
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| 8.94±1.39 | 13.68±1.58 | 19.51±1.40 | CD vs controls p = 0.07; IBS vs controls p<0.001; IBS vs CD p<0.05 |
Data representing the sub-group categorization based on HFnu-HRV K-mean classification.
| Controls | Crohn’s Disease (CD) | Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) | ||||
| Resting parasympathetic level | High (n = 15) | Low (n = 11) | High (n = 8) | Low (n = 13) | High(n = 12) | Low (n = 14) |
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| 68±2 | 65±3 | 71±4 | 65±3 | 64±2 | 66±2 |
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| 894±35 | 928±41 | 879±58 | 938±45 | 940±30 | 912±28 |
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| 982±134 | 718±157 | 492±184 | 973±134 | 885±150 | 693±140 |
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| 323±65 | 275±76 | 202±89 | 493±70 | 387±73 | 311±67 |
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| 39±3 | 68±3 | 36±6 | 63±4 | 34±3 | 66±3 |
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| 57±2 | 27±3 | 56±3 | 20±3 | 57±2 | 28±2 |
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| 0.74±0.2 | 2.75±0.2 | 0.71±0.8 | 3.89±0.6 | 0.62±0.3 | 2.79±0.3 |
Data are expressed as mean ± sem. Comparisons are made between low and high parasympathetic level using permutations test.
*p<0.05;
**p<0.01;
***p<0.001.
Influence of the vagal tone on the plasma levels of the morning salivary and plasma cortisol, IL-6, norepinephrine concentrations, state-anxiety and depressive symptomatology scores in Controls, Crohn’s disease (CD) and Irritable Bowel syndrome (IBS) patients.
| Controls | Crohn’s Disease (CD) | Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) | ||||
| Resting parasympathetic level | High (n = 15) | Low (n = 11) | High (n = 8) | Low (n = 13) | High (n = 12) | Low (n = 14) |
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| 14.35±2.27 | 9.75±2.56 | 9.37±3.21 | 15.80±2.45 | 14.30±2.56 | 16.69±2.36 |
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| 389.5±61.4 | 343±69.2 | 484.9±81.2 | 419.33±66.3 | 344.5±66.3 | 319.1±61.4 |
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| 0.83±0.28 | 0.22±0.32 | 0.50±0.38 | 0.75±0.31 | 0.61±0.31 | 0.65±0.29 |
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| 1.8±0.18 | 1.6±0.22 | 2.3±0.24 | 2.05±0.2 | 2.01±0.20 | 2.38±0.19 |
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| 33.06±2 | 29.1±3 | 37.7±4 | 40.2±2 | 41.1±3 | 41.3±2 |
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| 8.5±2 | 9.3±2 | 13.7±2 | 13.6±2 | 20.3±2 | 18.7±2 |
Data are expressed as mean ± sem. Comparisons are made between low and high parasympathetic level using permutations test.