Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea

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Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea. / Stöckel, Cornelia; Esser, Roland W; Gamer, Matthias; Büchel, Christian; von Leupoldt, Andreas.

In: NEURAL PLAST, Vol. 2016, 2016, p. 6434987.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Stöckel, C, Esser, RW, Gamer, M, Büchel, C & von Leupoldt, A 2016, 'Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea', NEURAL PLAST, vol. 2016, pp. 6434987. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/6434987

APA

Stöckel, C., Esser, R. W., Gamer, M., Büchel, C., & von Leupoldt, A. (2016). Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea. NEURAL PLAST, 2016, 6434987. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/6434987

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{877676864fc14f709c31309c764a0049,
title = "Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea",
abstract = "Dyspnea is common in many cardiorespiratory diseases. Already the anticipation of this aversive symptom elicits fear in many patients resulting in unfavorable health behaviors such as activity avoidance and sedentary lifestyle. This study investigated brain mechanisms underlying these anticipatory processes. We induced dyspnea using resistive-load breathing in healthy subjects during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Blocks of severe and mild dyspnea alternated, each preceded by anticipation periods. Severe dyspnea activated a network of sensorimotor, cerebellar, and limbic areas. The left insular, parietal opercular, and cerebellar cortices showed increased activation already during dyspnea anticipation. Left insular and parietal opercular cortex showed increased connectivity with right insular and anterior cingulate cortex when severe dyspnea was anticipated, while the cerebellum showed increased connectivity with the amygdala. Notably, insular activation during dyspnea perception was positively correlated with midbrain activation during anticipation. Moreover, anticipatory fear was positively correlated with anticipatory activation in right insular and anterior cingulate cortex. The results demonstrate that dyspnea anticipation activates brain areas involved in dyspnea perception. The involvement of emotion-related areas such as insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and amygdala during dyspnea anticipation most likely reflects anticipatory fear and might underlie the development of unfavorable health behaviors in patients suffering from dyspnea.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Cornelia St{\"o}ckel and Esser, {Roland W} and Matthias Gamer and Christian B{\"u}chel and {von Leupoldt}, Andreas",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1155/2016/6434987",
language = "English",
volume = "2016",
pages = "6434987",
journal = "NEURAL PLAST",
issn = "2090-5904",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Brain Responses during the Anticipation of Dyspnea

AU - Stöckel, Cornelia

AU - Esser, Roland W

AU - Gamer, Matthias

AU - Büchel, Christian

AU - von Leupoldt, Andreas

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Dyspnea is common in many cardiorespiratory diseases. Already the anticipation of this aversive symptom elicits fear in many patients resulting in unfavorable health behaviors such as activity avoidance and sedentary lifestyle. This study investigated brain mechanisms underlying these anticipatory processes. We induced dyspnea using resistive-load breathing in healthy subjects during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Blocks of severe and mild dyspnea alternated, each preceded by anticipation periods. Severe dyspnea activated a network of sensorimotor, cerebellar, and limbic areas. The left insular, parietal opercular, and cerebellar cortices showed increased activation already during dyspnea anticipation. Left insular and parietal opercular cortex showed increased connectivity with right insular and anterior cingulate cortex when severe dyspnea was anticipated, while the cerebellum showed increased connectivity with the amygdala. Notably, insular activation during dyspnea perception was positively correlated with midbrain activation during anticipation. Moreover, anticipatory fear was positively correlated with anticipatory activation in right insular and anterior cingulate cortex. The results demonstrate that dyspnea anticipation activates brain areas involved in dyspnea perception. The involvement of emotion-related areas such as insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and amygdala during dyspnea anticipation most likely reflects anticipatory fear and might underlie the development of unfavorable health behaviors in patients suffering from dyspnea.

AB - Dyspnea is common in many cardiorespiratory diseases. Already the anticipation of this aversive symptom elicits fear in many patients resulting in unfavorable health behaviors such as activity avoidance and sedentary lifestyle. This study investigated brain mechanisms underlying these anticipatory processes. We induced dyspnea using resistive-load breathing in healthy subjects during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Blocks of severe and mild dyspnea alternated, each preceded by anticipation periods. Severe dyspnea activated a network of sensorimotor, cerebellar, and limbic areas. The left insular, parietal opercular, and cerebellar cortices showed increased activation already during dyspnea anticipation. Left insular and parietal opercular cortex showed increased connectivity with right insular and anterior cingulate cortex when severe dyspnea was anticipated, while the cerebellum showed increased connectivity with the amygdala. Notably, insular activation during dyspnea perception was positively correlated with midbrain activation during anticipation. Moreover, anticipatory fear was positively correlated with anticipatory activation in right insular and anterior cingulate cortex. The results demonstrate that dyspnea anticipation activates brain areas involved in dyspnea perception. The involvement of emotion-related areas such as insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and amygdala during dyspnea anticipation most likely reflects anticipatory fear and might underlie the development of unfavorable health behaviors in patients suffering from dyspnea.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1155/2016/6434987

DO - 10.1155/2016/6434987

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 27648309

VL - 2016

SP - 6434987

JO - NEURAL PLAST

JF - NEURAL PLAST

SN - 2090-5904

ER -