心血管疾病发病过程中的中枢应激途径

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Clinical Autonomic Research Pub Date : 2023-12-17 DOI:10.1007/s10286-023-01008-x
Joe Braun, Mariya Patel, Tatiana Kameneva, Charlotte Keatch, Gavin Lambert, Elisabeth Lambert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的 在评估所有患者群体的心血管病理生理学时,精神压力都是必须考虑的因素。大量证据表明,压力、心血管疾病和异常的脑体交流之间存在关联。方法在 PubMed、ScienceDirect 和 Scopus 数据库中搜索关键术语,包括精神压力、心血管疾病和中枢控制。方法在 PubMed、ScienceDirect 和 Scopus 数据库中搜索关键词,包括精神压力、心血管疾病和中枢控制。在讨论通过前运动脑干中介进行的脑体连接之前,重点介绍了人类神经影像研究和压力信息流。最后,我们回顾了目前对病理生理压力和心血管疾病病因的理解。结果皮质边缘回路的结构和功能变化编码压力信息,并由下丘脑和杏仁核整合。脑干和脊髓核团的前自律神经脑-体中继建立了自律神经失调,并导致气压反射功能的改变、交感神经纤维的发射、去甲肾上腺素的细胞再摄取和副交感神经反射的撤销。其综合结果是严重的肾上腺素能,并增加了心肌病变、心律失常、冠状动脉缺血、高血压和未来突发压力诱发心力衰竭的总体风险。用于评估这种关系的大规模多模态神经影像数据分析的不断积累,为未来心血管疾病的检测和预防提供了令人兴奋的新治疗目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Central stress pathways in the development of cardiovascular disease

Purpose

Mental stress is of essential consideration when assessing cardiovascular pathophysiology in all patient populations. Substantial evidence indicates associations among stress, cardiovascular disease and aberrant brain–body communication. However, our understanding of the flow of stress information in humans, is limited, despite the crucial insights this area may offer into future therapeutic targets for clinical intervention.

Methods

Key terms including mental stress, cardiovascular disease and central control, were searched in PubMed, ScienceDirect and Scopus databases. Articles indicative of heart rate and blood pressure regulation, or central control of cardiovascular disease through direct neural innervation of the cardiac, splanchnic and vascular regions were included. Focus on human neuroimaging research and the flow of stress information is described, before brain–body connectivity, via pre-motor brainstem intermediates is discussed. Lastly, we review current understandings of pathophysiological stress and cardiovascular disease aetiology.

Results

Structural and functional changes to corticolimbic circuitry encode stress information, integrated by the hypothalamus and amygdala. Pre-autonomic brain–body relays to brainstem and spinal cord nuclei establish dysautonomia and lead to alterations in baroreflex functioning, firing of the sympathetic fibres, cellular reuptake of norepinephrine and withdrawal of the parasympathetic reflex. The combined result is profoundly adrenergic and increases the likelihood of cardiac myopathy, arrhythmogenesis, coronary ischaemia, hypertension and the overall risk of future sudden stress-induced heart failure.

Conclusions

There is undeniable support that mental stress contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease. The emerging accumulation of large-scale multimodal neuroimaging data analytics to assess this relationship promises exciting novel therapeutic targets for future cardiovascular disease detection and prevention.

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来源期刊
Clinical Autonomic Research
Clinical Autonomic Research 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
6.90%
发文量
65
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical Autonomic Research aims to draw together and disseminate research work from various disciplines and specialties dealing with clinical problems resulting from autonomic dysfunction. Areas to be covered include: cardiovascular system, neurology, diabetes, endocrinology, urology, pain disorders, ophthalmology, gastroenterology, toxicology and clinical pharmacology, skin infectious diseases, renal disease. This journal is an essential source of new information for everyone working in areas involving the autonomic nervous system. A major feature of Clinical Autonomic Research is its speed of publication coupled with the highest refereeing standards.
期刊最新文献
Comment to the article titled: sympathetic dysfunction as an early indicator of autonomic involvement in Parkinson's disease. Autonomic failure associated with 16p11.2 duplication in two siblings. Adiposity and cardiac autonomic function in children with a family history of obesity. Responses to Valsalva's maneuver in spinal cord injury do not broadly relate to vasoconstrictor capacity. The insular cortex, autonomic asymmetry and cardiovascular control: looking at the right side of stroke.
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