Metrics of high cofluctuation and entropy to describe control of cardiac function in the stellate ganglion

Author:

Gurel Nil Z1ORCID,Sudarshan Koustubh B2ORCID,Hadaya Joseph13,Karavos Alex2,Temma Taro1,Hori Yuichi1,Armour J Andrew1,Kember Guy2,Ajijola Olujimi A13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UCLA Cardiac Arrhythmia Center and UCLA Neurocardiology Research Program of Excellence

2. Department of Engineering Mathematics and Internetworking, Dalhousie University

3. UCLA Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Physiology Program

Abstract

Stellate ganglia within the intrathoracic cardiac control system receive and integrate central, peripheral, and cardiopulmonary information to produce postganglionic cardiac sympathetic inputs. Pathological anatomical and structural remodeling occurs within the neurons of the stellate ganglion (SG) in the setting of heart failure (HF). A large proportion of SG neurons function as interneurons whose networking capabilities are largely unknown. Current therapies are limited to targeting sympathetic activity at the cardiac level or surgical interventions such as stellectomy, to treat HF. Future therapies that target the SG will require understanding of their networking capabilities to modify any pathological remodeling. We observe SG networking by examining cofluctuation and specificity of SG networked activity to cardiac cycle phases. We investigate network processing of cardiopulmonary transduction by SG neuronal populations in porcine with chronic pacing-induced HF and control subjects during extended in-vivo extracellular microelectrode recordings. We find that information processing and cardiac control in chronic HF by the SG, relative to controls, exhibits: (i) more frequent, short-lived, high magnitude cofluctuations, (ii) greater variation in neural specificity to cardiac cycles, and (iii) neural network activity and cardiac control linkage that depends on disease state and cofluctuation magnitude.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Science Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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