Litcius/Paper detail

Intensification of functional neural control on heartbeat dynamics in subclinical depression

Vincenzo Catrambone, Simone Messerotti Benvenuti, Claudio Gentili, Gaetano Valenza

2021Translational Psychiatry55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Subclinical depression (dysphoria) is a common condition that may increase the risk of major depression and leads to impaired quality of life and severe comorbid somatic diseases. Despite its prevalence, specific biological markers are unknown; consequently, the identification of dysphoria currently relies exclusively on subjective clinical scores and structured interviews. Based on recent neurocardiology studies that link brain and cardiovascular disorders, it was hypothesized that multi-system biomarkers of brain-body interplay may effectively characterize dysphoria. Thus, an ad hoc computational technique was developed to quantify the functional bidirectional brain-heart interplay. Accordingly, 32-channel electroencephalographic and heart rate variability series were obtained from 24 young dysphoric adults and 36 healthy controls. All participants were females of a similar age, and results were obtained during a 5-min resting state. The experimental results suggest that a specific feature of dysphoria is linked to an augmented functional central-autonomic control to the heart, which originates from central, frontopolar, and occipital oscillations and acts through cardiovascular sympathovagal activity. These results enable further development of a large set of novel biomarkers for mood disorders based on comprehensive brain-body measurements.

Topics & Concepts

DysphoriaDepression (economics)Subclinical infectionPsychologyBrain activity and meditationHeart rate variabilityMoodElectroencephalographyNeuroscienceClinical psychologyMedicinePsychiatryHeart rateInternal medicineAnxietyBlood pressureMacroeconomicsEconomicsHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic ControlFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesCardiac Health and Mental Health