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The Brain–Heart Connection
- Source :
- Circulation. 116:77-84
- Publication Year :
- 2007
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2007.
-
Abstract
- Neurocardiology has many dimensions, but it may be conceptualized as divided into 3 major categories: the heart’s effects on the brain (eg, cardiac source embolic stroke), the brain’s effects on the heart (eg, neurogenic heart disease), and neurocardiac syndromes (eg, Friedreich disease). The present review deals with the nervous system’s capacity to injure the heart. This subject is inherently important but also represents an example of a much more widespread and conceptually fascinating area of neurovisceral damage in general. In 1942, at the culmination of his distinguished career as Professor of Physiology at Harvard Medical School, Walter B. Cannon published a remarkable paper entitled “‘Voodoo’ Death,”1 in which he recounted anecdotal experiences, largely from the anthropology literature, of death from fright. These often remote events, drawn from widely disparate parts of the world, had several features in common. They were all induced by an absolute belief that an external force, such as a wizard or medicine man, could, at will, cause demise and that the victim himself had no power to alter this course. This perceived lack of control over a powerful external force is the sine qua non for all the cases recounted by Cannon, who postulated that death was caused “by a lasting and intense action of the sympathico-adrenal system.” Cannon believed that this phenomenon was limited to societies in which the people were “so superstitious, so ignorant, that they feel themselves bewildered strangers in a hostile world. Instead of knowledge, they have fertile and unrestricted imaginations which fill their environment with all manner of evil spirits capable of affecting their lives disastrously.” Over the years since Cannon’s observations, evidence has accumulated to support his concept that “voodoo” death is, in fact, a real phenomenon but, far from being limited to ancient peoples, may be a basic …
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Cardiotonic Agents
Sympathetic Nervous System
Psychoanalysis
Heart Diseases
Sine qua non
Culture
Emotions
Hypothalamus
Subject (philosophy)
Myocardial Reperfusion Injury
Sudden death
Electrocardiography
Immobilization
Mice
Necrosis
Catecholamines
Dogs
Helplessness, Learned
Heart Conduction System
Parasympathetic Nervous System
Stress, Physiological
Physiology (medical)
Phenomenon
medicine
Animals
Humans
Myocardial Stunning
business.industry
Myocardium
Arrhythmias, Cardiac
Vagus Nerve
Demise
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Psychophysiologic Disorders
Neurocardiology
humanities
Rats
Surgery
Thyroxine
Death, Sudden, Cardiac
Action (philosophy)
Fludrocortisone
Ergocalciferols
Cats
Calcium
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
business
Physiological psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15244539 and 00097322
- Volume :
- 116
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Circulation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....95fdeeed3ce6010444841f0d64cbc092
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.106.678995