McIntosh Roger C, Chow Dominic C, Lum Corey J, Hidalgo Melissa, Shikuma Cecilia M, Kallianpur Kalpana J
Department of Health Psychology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124, USA.
Hawaii Center for AIDS, Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, HI 96813, USA.
Clin Neurophysiol. 2017 Oct;128(10):1839-1850. doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2017.07.398. Epub 2017 Jul 25.
Prolongation of the QT interval, i.e., measure of the time between the start of the Q wave and the end of the T wave, is a precursor to fatal cardiac arrhythmias commonly observed in individuals infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), and is related to dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system. We investigated the relationship between QT interval length and resting state functional connectivity (rsFC) of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC), a core region of the brain that is involved with cardio-autonomic regulation.
Eighteen HIV+ men on antiretroviral therapy and with no history of heart disease were compared with 26 HIV-negative control subjects who had similar demographic and cardio-metabolic characteristics. A seed-based rsFC analysis of the right and left VMPFC was performed at the individual subject level, and 2nd-level analyses were conducted to identify the following: group differences in connectivity, brain regions correlating with corrected (QTc) interval length before and after controlling for those group differences, and regions where seed-based rsFC correlates with CD4 count and QTc interval within HIV+ individuals.
HIV-negative adults showed greater rsFC between the VMPFC seed regions and several default mode network structures. Across groups greater rsFC with the left anterior insula was associated with shorter QTc intervals, whereas right posterior insula connectivity with the VMPFC correlated with greater QTc intervals. HIV patients with lower CD4 counts and higher QTc intervals showed greater rsFC between the right VMPFC and the right posterior insula and dorsal cingulate gyrus.
This study demonstrates that QTc interval lengths are associated with distinct patterns of VMPFC rsFC with posterior and anterior insula. In HIV patients, longer QTc interval and lower CD4 count corresponded to weaker VMPFC connectivity with the dorsal striatrum.
A forebrain control mechanism may be implicated in the suppression of cardiovagal influence that confers risk for ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in HIV+ individuals.
QT间期延长,即从Q波起点到T波终点的时间测量值,是感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的个体中常见的致命性心律失常的先兆,且与自主神经系统失调有关。我们研究了QT间期长度与腹内侧前额叶皮层(VMPFC)静息态功能连接(rsFC)之间的关系,VMPFC是大脑中参与心脏自主调节的核心区域。
将18名接受抗逆转录病毒治疗且无心脏病史的HIV阳性男性与26名具有相似人口统计学和心脏代谢特征的HIV阴性对照受试者进行比较。在个体水平上对左右VMPFC进行基于种子点的rsFC分析,并进行二级分析以确定以下内容:连接性的组间差异、在控制这些组间差异前后与校正后(QTc)间期长度相关的脑区,以及在HIV阳性个体中基于种子点的rsFC与CD4计数和QTc间期相关的区域。
HIV阴性成年人在VMPFC种子区域与几个默认模式网络结构之间表现出更强的rsFC。在所有组中,与左侧前脑岛的rsFC越强,QTc间期越短,而右侧后脑岛与VMPFC的连接性与更长的QTc间期相关。CD4计数较低且QTc间期较高的HIV患者在右侧VMPFC与右侧后脑岛和背侧扣带回之间表现出更强的rsFC。
本研究表明,QTc间期长度与VMPFC与前后脑岛的rsFC的不同模式相关。在HIV患者中,较长的QTc间期和较低的CD4计数对应于VMPFC与背侧纹状体的连接性较弱。
一种前脑控制机制可能与抑制心脏迷走神经影响有关,这种影响会使HIV阳性个体面临室性心律失常和心源性猝死的风险。