4.5 Article

Central- and autonomic nervous system coupling in schizophrenia

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2015.0178

Keywords

heart-brain interactions; causal coupling analyses; joint symbolic dynamics; partial-directed coherence; autonomous nervous system; schizophrenia

Funding

  1. Thuringian Ministry of Economy, Labour and Technology
  2. European Social Fund (ESF) [2014 KN 0018]
  3. Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWI) [KF 2447308KJ4]

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The autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction has been well described in schizophrenia (SZ), a severe mental disorder. Nevertheless, the coupling between the ANS and central brain activity has been not addressed until now in SZ. The interactions between the central nervous system (CNS) and ANS need to be considered as a feedback-feed-forward system that supports flexible and adaptive responses to specific demands. For the first time, to the best of our knowledge, this study investigates central-autonomic couplings (CAC) studying heart rate, blood pressure and electroencephalogram in paranoid schizophrenic patients, comparing them with age-gender-matched healthy subjects (CO). The emphasis is to determine how these couplings are composed by the different regulatory aspects of the CNS-ANS. We found that CAC were bidirectional, and that the causal influence of central activity towards systolic blood pressure was more strongly pronounced than such causal influence towards heart rate in paranoid schizophrenic patients when compared with CO. In paranoid schizophrenic patients, the central activity was a much stronger variable, being more random and having fewer rhythmic oscillatory components. This study provides a more in-depth understanding of the interplay of neuronal and autonomic regulatory processes in SZ and most likely greater insights into the complex relationship between psychotic stages and autonomic activity.

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