| Literature DB >> 31417413 |
Gert Pfurtscheller1,2, Beate Rassler3, Andreas R Schwerdtfeger2,4, Wolfgang Klimesch5, Alexandre Andrade6, Gerhard Schwarz7, Julian F Thayer8.
Abstract
Recently, we reported on the unusual "switch-off" of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) by analyzing heart rate (HR) beat-to-beat interval (RRI) signals and respiration in five subjects during a potentially anxiety-provoking first-time functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning with slow spontaneous breathing waves (Rassler et al., 2018). This deviation from a fundamental physiological phenomenon is of interest and merits further research. Therefore, in this study, the interplay between blood-oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) activity in the cerebellum/brain stem, RRI, and respiration was probed. Both the cardiovascular and the respiratory centers are located in the medulla oblongata and pons, indicating that dominant slow rhythmic activity is present in the brain stem. The recording of BOLD signals provides a way to investigate associated neural activity fluctuation in the brain stem. We found slow spontaneous breathing waves associated with two types of slow BOLD oscillations with dominant frequencies at 0.10 and 0.15 Hz in the brain stem. Both BOLD oscillations were recorded simultaneously. One is hypothesized as vessel motion-based phenomenon (BOLDv) associated with the start of expiration; the other one as pattern associated with neural activity (BOLDn) acting as a driving force for spontaneous inspiration and RRI increase (unusual cessation of RSA) about 2-3 s after BOLDv. This time delay of 2-3 s corresponds to the neurovascular coupling time.Entities:
Keywords: 0.1-Hz oscillations; blood-oxygen level-dependent activity; brain stem; central pacemaker; heart rate variability; respiratory sinus arrhythmia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31417413 PMCID: PMC6682698 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1T1 images from medial, sagittal, and axial slices from one subject (Talairach space 0, 20, −34). In the sagittal slice (upper right image), the pons is clearly visible, and in the axial slice (bottom) the proximity of cerebellum and brain stem is documented.
Figure 2Examples of ongoing BOLD, RRI, and respiration signals and corresponding averaged waves (±SE) for two subjects, one with dominant 0.1-Hz [1Rb1 (A)] and one with dominant 0.15-Hz oscillations [11Ra1 (B)]. The vertical dashed lines in the panels on the left-hand side indicate maxima (peaks) of RRI oscillations used as trigger for averaging. Peaks of the averaged waves are indicated in the panels on the right-hand side.
Figure 3Averaged waves (±SE) of BOLD signals from left precentral gyrus (ROI 1), left brain stem (BOLDn, ROIs 103, 105), right brain stem (BOLDv, 96, 98, 100), respiration, and RR intervals (from top to bottom) from all five subjects. The peak latencies (difference from RRI peak) from important peaks are marked. The time shift of 2–3 s between the two BOLD signals from the cerebellum/brain stem is indicated by a dotted line.