4.7 Article

Limbic Responses to Aversive Visual Stimuli during the Acute and Recovery Phase of Takotsubo Syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11164891

Keywords

brain-heart axis; limbic system; insular cortex; takotsubo syndrome; myocardial infarction; task-based fMRI

Funding

  1. Osterreichischer Herzfonds
  2. Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research

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This study investigated the brain responses of takotsubo syndrome patients during the acute and recovery phases, and found that their limbic responses to aversive visual stimuli were attenuated during the acute phase but recovered within three months. This finding is important for understanding the neural mechanisms of takotsubo syndrome.
The role of the limbic system in the acute phase and during the recovery of takotsubo syndrome needs further clarification. In this longitudinal study, anatomical and task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging of the brain was performed during an emotional picture paradigm in 19 postmenopausal female takotsubo syndrome patients in the acute and recovery phases in comparison to sex- and aged-matched 15 healthy controls and 15 patients presenting with myocardial infarction. Statistical analyses were performed based on the general linear model where aversive and positive picture conditions were included in order to reveal group differences during encoding of aversive versus positive pictures and longitudinal changes. In the acute phase, takotsubo syndrome patients showed a lower response in regions involved in affective and cognitive emotional processes (e.g., insula, thalamus, frontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus) while viewing aversive versus positive pictures compared to healthy controls and patients presenting with myocardial infarction. In the recovery phase, the response in these brain regions normalized in takotsubo syndrome patients to the level of healthy controls, whereas patients 8-12 weeks after myocardial infarction showed lower responses in the limbic regions (mainly in the insula, frontal regions, thalamus, and inferior frontal gyrus) compared to healthy controls and takotsubo syndrome patients. In conclusion, compared to healthy controls and patients suffering from acute myocardial infarction, limbic responses to aversive visual stimuli are attenuated during the acute phase of takotsubo syndrome, recovering within three months. Reduced functional brain responses in the recovery phase after a myocardial infarction need further investigation.

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