scholarly journals Temporal Clustering of Skin Sympathetic Nerve Activity Bursts in Acute Myocardial Infarction Patients

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chun Liu ◽  
Chien-Hung Lee ◽  
Shien-Fong Lin ◽  
Wei-Chung Tsai

Backgrounds: Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) affects the autonomic nervous system (ANS) function. The aim of our study is to detect the particular patterns of ANS regulation in AMI. We hypothesize that altered ANS regulation in AMI patients causes synchronized neural discharge (clustering phenomenon) detected by non-invasive skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA).Methods: Forty subjects, including 20 AMI patients and 20 non-AMI controls, participated in the study. The wide-band bioelectrical signals (neuECG) were continuously recorded on the body surface for 5 min. SKNA was signal processed to depict the envelope of SKNA (eSKNA). By labeling the clusters, the AMI subjects were separated into non-AMI, non-cluster appearing (AMINCA), and cluster appearing (AMICA) groups.Results: The average eSKNA was significantly correlated with HRV low-frequency (LF) power (rho = −0.336) and high-frequency power (rho = −0.372). The cross-comparison results demonstrated that eSKNA is a valid surrogate marker to assess ANS in AMI patients. The frequency of cluster occurrence was 0.01–0.03 Hz and the amplitude was about 3 μV. The LF/HF ratio of AMICA (median: 1.877; Q1–Q3: 1.483–2.413) revealed significantly lower than AMINCA (median: 3.959; Q1–Q3: 1.840–6.562). The results suggest that the SKNA clustering is a unique temporal pattern of ANS synchronized discharge, which could indicate the lower sympathetic status (by HRV) in AMI patients.Conclusion: This is the first study to identify SKNA clustering phenomenon in AMI patients. Such a synchronized nerve discharge pattern could be detected with non-invasive SKNA signals. SKNA temporal clustering could be a novel biomarker to classify ANS regulation ability in AMI patients.Clinical and Translational Significance: SKNA is higher in AMI patients than in control and negatively correlates with parasympathetic parameters. SKNA clustering is associated with a lower LF/HF ratio that has been shown to correlate with sudden cardiac death in AMI. The lack of SKNA temporal clustering could indicate poor ANS regulation in AMI patients.

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (S1) ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Takashi Kusayama ◽  
Johnson Wong ◽  
Xiao Liu ◽  
Wenbo He ◽  
Anisiia Doytchinova ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 119 (4) ◽  
pp. 1283-1290
Author(s):  
Philip S. Bolton ◽  
Elie Hammam ◽  
Vaughan G. Macefield

We previously showed that dynamic, but not static, neck displacement modulates muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) to lower limbs of humans. However, it is not known whether dynamic neck displacement modulates skin sympathetic nerve activity (SSNA). Tungsten microelectrodes inserted into the common peroneal nerve were used to record SSNA in 5 female and 4 male subjects lying supine on a table that fixed their head in space but allowed trapezoidal ramp (8.1 ± 1.2°/s) and hold (17.5° for 53 s) or sinusoidal (35° peak to peak at 0.33–0.46 Hz) horizontal displacement of the body about the head. SSNA recordings were made before, during, and after trapezoidal and sinusoidal displacements of the body. Spike frequency analysis of trapezoidal displacements and cross-correlation analysis during sinusoidal displacements revealed that SSNA was not changed by trapezoid body-only displacement but was cyclically modulated during sinusoidal angular displacements (median, 95% CI: 27.9%, 19.6–48.0%). The magnitude of this modulation was not statistically ( P > 0.05) different from that of cardiac and respiratory modulation at rest (47.1%, 18.7–56.3% and 48.6%, 28.4–59.3%, respectively) or during sinusoidal displacement (10.3%, 6.2–32.1% and 26.9%, 13.6–43.3%, respectively). Respiratory frequency was entrained above its resting rate (0.26 Hz, 0.2–0.29 Hz) during sinusoidal neck displacement; there was no significant difference ( P > 0.05) between respiratory frequency (0.38 Hz, 0.25–0.49 Hz) and sinusoidal displacement frequency (0.39 Hz, 0.35–0.42 Hz). This study provides evidence that SSNA is modulated during neck movement, raising the possibility that neck mechanoreceptors may contribute to the cutaneous vasoconstriction and sweat release associated with motion sickness. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study demonstrates that dynamic, but not static, stretching of the neck modulates skin sympathetic nerve activity in the lower limbs.


JCI Insight ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Kusayama ◽  
Juyi Wan ◽  
Anisiia Doytchinova ◽  
Johnson Wong ◽  
Ryan A. Kabir ◽  
...  

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