Cardiac and respiratory relationships with neural discharge in the anterior cingulate cortex during sleep-walking states
Frysinger RC and Harper RM (1986) Cardiac and respiratory relationships with neural discharge in the anterior cingulate cortex during sleep-walking states. Exp Neurol 94:2 247–63.
Abstract: The discharge properties of single neurons in the anterior cingulate cortex were correlated with timing aspects of the respiratory and cardiac cycle and with arterial pressure in undrugged, freely moving cats during waking, quiet sleep, and rapid eye movement sleep (REM). Two types of analyses were carried out. Discharge timing relationships with the cardiac or respiratory cycle were examined using cross-correlation histograms. Tonic rate correlations were calculated as a linear regression between breath-by-breath mean discharge rate of the cell and breath-by-breath values of respiratory parameters or arterial pressure. Eight of fifty-five cells recorded showed a discharge timing relationship with either the cardiac or the respiratory cycle. Seven of these were state-dependent (six in waking, one in REM). Thirty cells showed a tonic rate correlation with the respiratory period, and 23 cells had tonic correlations with maximum arterial pressure. All tonic correlations for a given cell were state-dependent, but such correlations were observed in all states. Correlation coefficients, while statistically significant, were generally low, and r2 values rarely exceeded 0.2. The relative paucity of discharge timing relationships, the state dependency, and the low r values of the tonic rate correlations suggest that the anterior cingulate cortex has a complex and indirect relationship to central cardiovascular and respiratory control mechanisms.
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Context
- To assess the correlation of activity in anterior cingulate cortex with the timing of the breathing and heartbeat, cross-correlations were assessed using recordings in cat. 8 of 55 neurons showed a timing relationship with respiratory or cardiac cycle, 30 cells’ firing rates correlated with respiratory period, and 23 cells showed rate correlations with maximum arterial pressure. The findings suggest some association between cingulate activity and autonomic function, but statistical significance is difficult to interpret, and causation cannot be inferred.