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Out-of-step: brain-heart desynchronization in anxiety disorders

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MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
卷 26, 期 6, 页码 1726-1737

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-021-01029-w

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Imaging studies in anxiety disorders reveal abnormal functional connectivity in the salience network, somatomotor network, and default mode network. These network changes may be due to reduced phase synchronization between neural and cardiac activity, influenced by cardiac afferents reaching subcortical serotonergic and noradrenergic nuclei, impacting emotional arousal and sense-of-self in anxiety disorders. Integrating theories of active interference and hyperarousal, a neuro-cardiac and biochemically-driven mechanism is proposed for key psychopathological symptoms in anxiety disorders.
Imaging studies in anxiety disorders (AD) show abnormal functional connectivity primarily in the salience network (SN), somatomotor network (SMN), and default mode network (DMN). However, it is not clear how precisely these network changes occur including their relation to psychopathological symptoms. Here, we show that the functional networks affected in AD overlap with cortical regions that receive visceral inputs (the so-called central/visceral autonomic network). Focusing on cardiac afferents, we suggest that network changes in AD may be due to reduced phase synchronization between ongoing neural and cardiac activity. This neuro-cardiac desynchronization occurs due to the abnormal phase resetting of neural activity at the onset of each heartbeat, as measured by a lower intertrial coherence and heartbeat-evoked potential. Biochemically, cardiac afferents reach subcortical serotonergic raphe nuclei and noradrenergic locus coeruleus (among others) which, in turn, are known to reciprocally modulate the DMN and SMN/SN on the cortical level. Consistent with the network changes in AD, decreases in serotonergic and noradrenergic activity are known to increase connectivity in both SMN and SN while, at the same time, they decrease DMN connectivity. SMN and SN increases, in turn, lead to increased emotional arousal/anxiety and bodily awareness whereas decreased DMN connectivity leads to an unstable sense-of-self in AD. Finally, we integrate our proposal with interoceptive predictive processing models suggesting neuro-cardiac desynchronization as a mechanism for noisy bottom-up information leading to a persistently uncertain bodily state in top-down models. In sum, integrating theories on active interference and hyperarousal, we propose a precise neuro-cardiac and biochemically -driven mechanisms for key psychopathological symptoms of AD.

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