4.6 Article

The Brain Circuitry Underlying the Temporal Evolution of Nausea in Humans

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 806-813

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhs073

Keywords

brain-gut interactions; interoception; motion sickness; neuroimaging

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K01-AT002166, R01-AT004714, P01-AT002048, F05-AT003770, K23-DK069614, K24-AT004095]
  2. National Center for Research Resources [P41RR14075, CRC 1 UL1 RR025758]
  3. Mental Illness and Neuroscience Discovery (MIND) Institute
  4. International Foundation of Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders
  5. Information Technology Advancement, Korea [IITA-2008-(C1090-0801-0002)]

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Nausea is a universal human experience. It evolves slowly over time, and brain mechanisms underlying this evolution are not well understood. Our functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) approach evaluated brain activity contributing to and arising from increasing motion sickness. Subjects rated transitions to increasing nausea, produced by visually induced vection within the fMRI environment. We evaluated parametrically increasing brain activity 1) precipitating increasing nausea and 2) following transition to stronger nausea. All subjects demonstrated visual stimulus-associated activation (P < 0.01) in primary and extrastriate visual cortices. In subjects experiencing motion sickness, increasing phasic activity preceding nausea was found in amygdala, putamen, and dorsal pons/locus ceruleus. Increasing sustained response following increased nausea was found in a broader network including insular, anterior cingulate, orbitofrontal, somatosensory and prefrontal cortices. Moreover, sustained anterior insula activation to strong nausea was correlated with midcingulate activation (r = 0.87), suggesting a closer linkage between these specific regions within the brain circuitry subserving nausea perception. Thus, while phasic activation in fear conditioning and noradrenergic brainstem regions precipitates transition to strong nausea, sustained activation following this transition occurs in a broader interoceptive, limbic, somatosensory, and cognitive network, reflecting the multiple dimensions of this aversive commonly occurring symptom.

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