Background: the autonomic response to transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) has been linked to the engagement of brainstem circuitry modulating autonomic outflow. However, the physiological mechanisms supporting such efferent vagal responses are not well understood, particularly in humans. Hypothesis: we present a paradigm for estimating directional brain-heart interactions in response to taVNS. We propose that our approach is able to identify causal links between the activity of brainstem nuclei involved in autonomic control and cardiovagal outflow. Methods: we adopt an approach based on a recent reformulation of granger causality that includes permutation-based, nonparametric statistics. The method is applied to ultrahigh field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data collected on healthy subjects during taVNS. Results: our framework identified taVNS-evoked functional brainstem responses with superior sensitivity compared to prior conventional approaches, confirming causal links between taVNS stimulation and fMRI response in the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS). furthermore, our causal approach elucidated potential mechanisms by which information is relayed between brainstem nuclei and cardiovagal, i.e., high-frequency heart rate variability, in response to taVNS. Our findings revealed that key brainstem nuclei, known from animal models to be involved in cardiovascular control, exert a causal influence on taVNS-induced cardiovagal outflow in humans. conclusion: our causal approach allowed us to noninvasively evaluate directional interactions between fMRI BOLD signals from brainstem nuclei and cardiovagal outflow.

Toschi, N., Duggento, A., Barbieri, R., Garcia, R., Fisher, H., Kettner, N., et al. (2023). Causal influence of brainstem response to transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation on cardiovagal outflow. BRAIN STIMULATION, 16(6), 1557-1565 [10.1016/j.brs.2023.10.007].

Causal influence of brainstem response to transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation on cardiovagal outflow

Toschi, N
;
Duggento, A;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Background: the autonomic response to transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) has been linked to the engagement of brainstem circuitry modulating autonomic outflow. However, the physiological mechanisms supporting such efferent vagal responses are not well understood, particularly in humans. Hypothesis: we present a paradigm for estimating directional brain-heart interactions in response to taVNS. We propose that our approach is able to identify causal links between the activity of brainstem nuclei involved in autonomic control and cardiovagal outflow. Methods: we adopt an approach based on a recent reformulation of granger causality that includes permutation-based, nonparametric statistics. The method is applied to ultrahigh field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data collected on healthy subjects during taVNS. Results: our framework identified taVNS-evoked functional brainstem responses with superior sensitivity compared to prior conventional approaches, confirming causal links between taVNS stimulation and fMRI response in the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS). furthermore, our causal approach elucidated potential mechanisms by which information is relayed between brainstem nuclei and cardiovagal, i.e., high-frequency heart rate variability, in response to taVNS. Our findings revealed that key brainstem nuclei, known from animal models to be involved in cardiovascular control, exert a causal influence on taVNS-induced cardiovagal outflow in humans. conclusion: our causal approach allowed us to noninvasively evaluate directional interactions between fMRI BOLD signals from brainstem nuclei and cardiovagal outflow.
2023
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore FIS/07
Settore PHYS-06/A - Fisica per le scienze della vita, l'ambiente e i beni culturali
English
We thank the following organizations for funding support: US National Institutes for Health (NIH), Office Of The Director (OT2-OD023867); Center for Functional Neuroimaging Technologies (P41-EB015896); National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), NIH U54-MH118919; National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH), NIH (P01-AT009965, R21-AT011918, K01-AT012208); National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), NIH (U54-MH118919); the Bernard Osher Foundation; and the American Heart Association (16GRNT26420084); Osher Center for Integrative Medicine (NIH NCCIH R21-AT011918, NIH NCCIH K01-AT012208)#NEXTGENERATIONEU (NGEU) and funded by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (MUR), National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), project MNESYS (PE0000006) (to NT)– A Multiscale integrated approach to the study of the nervous system in health and disease (DN. 1553 11.10.2022); by the MUR-PNRR M4C2I1.3 PE6 project PE00000019 Heal Italia (to NT); by the NATIONAL CENTRE FOR HPC, BIG DATA AND QUANTUM COMPUTING, within the spoke “Multiscale Modeling and Engineering Applications" (to NT); the EXPERIENCE project (European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement No. 101017727); the CROSSBRAIN project (European Union's European Innovation Council under grant agreement No. 101070908). This work also involved the use of instrumentation supported by the NIH Shared Instrumentation Grant Program and/or High-End Instrumentation Grant Program; specifically, Grant no. S1-0RR023043.
Toschi, N., Duggento, A., Barbieri, R., Garcia, R., Fisher, H., Kettner, N., et al. (2023). Causal influence of brainstem response to transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation on cardiovagal outflow. BRAIN STIMULATION, 16(6), 1557-1565 [10.1016/j.brs.2023.10.007].
Toschi, N; Duggento, A; Barbieri, R; Garcia, R; Fisher, H; Kettner, N; Napadow, V; Sclocco, R
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/346088
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