2012
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00764.2011
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Forebrain organization representing baroreceptor gating of somatosensory afferents within the cortical autonomic network

Abstract: Somatosensory afferents are represented within the cortical autonomic network (CAN). However, the representation of somatosensory afferents, and the consequent cardiovascular effects, may be modified by levels of baroreceptor input. Thus, we examined the cortical regions involved with processing somatosensory inputs during baroreceptor unloading. Neuroimaging sessions (functional magnetic resonance imaging [fMRI]) recorded brain activity during 30 mmHg lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) alone and combined wit… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…In experimental animals, 30 days of CIH exposure evokes c-fos expression in the cingulate cortex (Sica et al, 2000b). Consistent with our findings, orthostatic stressors, such as lower-body negative pressure, and inspiratory-capacity apnoea, which unload baroreceptors and increase MSNA, are associated with increased ACC signal activity (Goswami et al, 2012; Macefield et al, 2006), and heart rate variability is associated with changes in activity within both the ACC and retrosplenial cortex (Critchley et al, 2003). The combined evidence demonstrates a key role for the ACC and retrosplenial cortex in the autonomic circuitry, and hence the present findings of altered activity in OSA raise the possibility that dysfunction in these brain regions contributes to the sympathoexcitation in OSA.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…In experimental animals, 30 days of CIH exposure evokes c-fos expression in the cingulate cortex (Sica et al, 2000b). Consistent with our findings, orthostatic stressors, such as lower-body negative pressure, and inspiratory-capacity apnoea, which unload baroreceptors and increase MSNA, are associated with increased ACC signal activity (Goswami et al, 2012; Macefield et al, 2006), and heart rate variability is associated with changes in activity within both the ACC and retrosplenial cortex (Critchley et al, 2003). The combined evidence demonstrates a key role for the ACC and retrosplenial cortex in the autonomic circuitry, and hence the present findings of altered activity in OSA raise the possibility that dysfunction in these brain regions contributes to the sympathoexcitation in OSA.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Goswami and colleagues demonstrated the involvement of the CAN in processing muscle afferent feedback through combined functional magnetic resonance imagining and electrical skin stimulation of forearm muscle afferents (Goswami et al, 2011). Subsequently, electrical stimulation of skeletal muscle afferents was shown to attenuate muscle sympathetic activation by ~4 bursts/minute during baroreceptor unloading using lower body negative pressure without altering heart rate, cardiac output, or mean arterial pressure (Goswami et al, 2012). No changes in MSNA were evident during combined skeletal muscle somatosensory stimulation and an expiratory apnea (Goswami et al, 2012), suggesting that muscle afferents do not converge with chemoreceptor inputs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, electrical stimulation of skeletal muscle afferents was shown to attenuate muscle sympathetic activation by ~4 bursts/minute during baroreceptor unloading using lower body negative pressure without altering heart rate, cardiac output, or mean arterial pressure (Goswami et al, 2012). No changes in MSNA were evident during combined skeletal muscle somatosensory stimulation and an expiratory apnea (Goswami et al, 2012), suggesting that muscle afferents do not converge with chemoreceptor inputs. Whether cutaneous afferents are associated similarly with the CAN is unclear as this previous work anesthetized the skin to limit their influence (Goswami et al, 2011, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An initial important observation of the current study was the difference in HR responses to IHG between the current participants and those of younger individuals reported earlier from our laboratory (Goswami et al 2012;Norton et al 2013;Wong et al 2007). This difference was statistically significant, as determined by an independent group's t-test that contrasted the present data with those published earlier.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 48%