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Fear processing is differentially affected by lateralized stimulation of carotid baroreceptors

Authors :
Mara Cercignani
Pietro Cortelli
Marco Bozzali
Hugo D. Critchley
Barbara Basile
Daniela Agalliu
Giovanni Calcagnini
Carlo Caltagirone
Sarah N. Garfinkel
Matteo Mancini
Emiliano Macaluso
Andrea Bassi
Eugenio Mattei
Elena Makovac
Makovac, Elena
Garfinkel, Sarah
Bassi, Andrea
Basile, Barbara
Macaluso, Emiliano
Cercignani, Mara
Calcagnini, Giovanni
Mattei, Eugenio
Mancini, Matteo
Agalliu, Daniela
Cortelli, Pietro
Caltagirone, Carlo
Critchley, Hugo
Bozzali, Marco
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Information processing, particularly of salient emotional stimuli, is influenced by cardiovascular afferent signals. Carotid baroreceptors signal the state of cardiovascular arousal to the brain, controlling blood pressure and heart rate via the baroreflex. Animal studies suggest a lateralization of this effect: Experimental stimulation of the right carotid sinus has a greater impact on heart rate when compared to left-sided stimulation. We tested, in humans, whether the processing of emotional information from faces was differentially affected by right versus left carotid afferents. To achieve so, we used an automated neck suction device to stimulate the carotid mechanoreceptors in the carotid sinus (parasympathetic pathway) synchronously with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) acquisition whilst participants were engaged in an emotional rating task of fearful and neutral faces. We showed that both right and left carotid stimulation (CS) influenced brain activity within opercular regions, although a stronger activation was observed within left insula during right stimulation compared to left stimulation. As regards the processing of fearful faces, right, but not left carotid stimulation attenuated the perceived intensity of fear, and (albeit to a lesser extent) enhanced intensity ratings of neutral faces. Mirroring the behavioural effects, there was a significant expression-by-stimulation interaction for right carotid stimulation only, when bilateral amygdala responses were attenuated to fear faces and amplified to neutral faces. Individual differences in basal heart rate variability (HRV) predicted the extent to which right carotid stimulation attenuated amygdala responses during fear processing. Our study provides unique evidence for lateralized viscerosensory effects on brain systems supporting emotional processing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00109452
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e320172deedc6e3602734c84317a0f27