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Aberrant Central Nervous System Responses to the Valsalva Maneuver in Heart Failure

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TLDR
Central ANS control areas have altered phase, extent, and direction of responses to Valsalva maneuvers in a small sample of HF patients, suggesting that therapeutics that address neuroprotective aspects may be useful interventions for the condition.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is associated with aberrant autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity, with altered responses to blood pressure and breathing challenges that appear to reflect abnormal central nervous system function. The authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to determine whether the Valsalva maneuver, an ANS challenge, would show abnormal responses in ANS regulatory areas of the brain in HF. Brain fMRI signal changes in 5 HF patients (left ventricular ejection fraction, 0.15±0.08; age, 50±10 years) and 14 controls (age, 47±11 years) were assessed during 3 successive Valsalva maneuvers. The hypothalamus, hippocampus, putamen, amygdala, mid-cingulate, right insula, and cerebellar cortex showed exaggerated and phase-shifted fMRI responses in HF; other areas showed inverted signals from those found in controls. Central ANS control areas have altered phase, extent, and direction of responses to Valsalva maneuvers in a small sample of HF patients. These findings suggest that therapeutics that address neuroprotective aspects may be useful interventions for the condition.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive functioning and chronic heart failure: a review of the literature (2002-July 2007).

TL;DR: Future studies are urgently needed to identify mechanisms of cognitive impairment in HF, prospectively identify changes in cognitive functioning that occur over time, and evaluate screening measures for use in clinical settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain injury in autonomic, emotional, and cognitive regulatory areas in patients with heart failure.

TL;DR: Brain structural injury emerged in areas involved in autonomic, pain, mood, language, and cognitive function in HF patients, and may result from neural injury associated with the syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain axonal and myelin evaluation in heart failure.

TL;DR: Axons and myelin are altered in HF, likely resulting from ischemic/hypoxic processes acting chronically and sub-acutely, respectively, which would contribute to the multiple autonomic and neuropsychological symptoms found in HF.
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Mammillary bodies and fornix fibers are injured in heart failure.

TL;DR: M mammillary body volumes and fornix cross-sectional areas were significantly reduced bilaterally in HF, and these differences remained after controlling age, gender, and intracranial volume.
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TL;DR: In this paper, a series of images were acquired continuously with the same imaging pulse sequence (either gradient echo or spin-echo inversion recovery) during task activation, and a significant increase in signal intensity (paired t test; P less than 0.001) of 1.8% +/- 0.9% was observed in the primary visual cortex (V1) of seven normal volunteers.
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