Abstract

Palpitations and dyspnea are fundamental to the human experience of panic anxiety, but it remains unclear how the brain dynamically represents changes in these interoceptive sensations. We used isoproterenol, a rapidly acting peripheral beta-adrenergic agonist similar to adrenaline, to induce sensations of palpitation and dyspnea in healthy individuals (n=23) during arterial spin labeling functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We hypothesized that the right mid-insular cortex, a central recipient of viscerosensory input, would preferentially respond during the peak period of cardiorespiratory stimulation. Bolus infusions of saline and isoproterenol (1 or 2 μg) were administered in a blinded manner while participants continuously rated the intensity of their cardiorespiratory sensation using a dial. Isoproterenol elicited dose-dependent increases in cardiorespiratory sensation, with all participants reporting palpitations and dyspnea at the 2 μg dose. Consistent with our hypothesis, the right mid-insula was maximally responsive during the peak period of sympathetic arousal, heart rate increase, and cardiorespiratory sensation. Furthermore, a shift in insula activity occurred during the recovery period, after the heart rate had largely returned to baseline levels, with an expansion of activation into anterior and posterior sectors of the right insula, as well as bilateral regions of the mid-insula. These results confirm the right mid-insula is a key node in the interoceptive network, and inform computational models proposing specific processing roles for insula subregions during homeostatic inference. The combination of isoproterenol and fMRI offers a powerful approach for evaluating insula function, and could be a useful probe for examining interoceptive dysfunction in psychiatric disorders.

Highlights

  • Palpitations and dyspnea are fundamental symptoms of panic anxiety (Craske et al, 2010)

  • The present study demonstrates that the cerebral blood flow response across human insula subregions varies dynamically as a function of the actual and perceived cardiorespiratory responses to sympathetically induced homeostatic perturbation

  • We replicated with ASL functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) our previous BOLD fMRI finding of increased cortical activity in the right midinsula during peripheral adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol (Hassanpour et al, 2016), confirming that this region dynamically tracks sympathetic cardiorespiratory interoception during homeostatic deviations of body state

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Summary

Introduction

Palpitations and dyspnea are fundamental symptoms of panic anxiety (Craske et al, 2010). It has been suggested that altered processing of these interoceptive sensations contributes to the development and/or maintenance of panic and other anxiety disorders (Bouton et al, 2001; Domschke et al, 2010; Paulus and Stein, 2010). While it is clinically well documented that individuals with panic disorder report prominent sensitivity toward acutely elevated interoceptive sensations (Boettcher et al, 2015), and that they disproportionately panic during their pharmacological induction (Balon et al, 1990; Pohl et al, 1988), a limited knowledge of the neuroanatomical structures recruited during cardiorespiratory interoceptive processing hinders progress in understanding the underlying neurobiological mechanisms. During our initial functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study in healthy individuals, we concurrently measured arterial and compensation for their participation (see Supplementary venous activity using arterial spin labeling (ASL) and blood- Methods for complete details)

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