At the Heart of Neurological Dimensionality: Cross-Nosological and Multimodal Cardiac Interoceptive Deficits

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Sofia Abrevaya - (Author)
  • Sol Fittipaldi - (Author)
  • Adolfo M. Garcia - (Author)
  • Martin Dottori - (Author)
  • Hernando Santamaría-García - (Author)
  • Augustina Birba - (Author)
  • Adrian Yoris - (Author)
  • Malin Katharina Hildebrandt - , Chair of Addiction Research (Author)
  • Paula Salamone - (Author)
  • Alethia de la Fuente - (Author)
  • Sofia Alarco Martí - (Author)
  • Indira Garcia Cordero - (Author)
  • Miguel Martorell Caro - (Author)
  • Ricardo Marcos Pautassi - (Author)
  • Cecilia Serrano - (Author)
  • Lucas Sedeno - (Author)
  • Agustín Ibanez - (Author)

Abstract

Objective
Neurological nosology, based on categorical systems, has largely ignored dimensional aspects of neurocognitive impairments. Transdiagnostic dimensional approaches of interoception (the sensing of visceral signals) may improve the descriptions of cross-pathological symptoms at behavioral, electrophysiological, and anatomical levels. Alterations of cardiac interoception (encompassing multidimensional variables such as accuracy, learning, sensibility, and awareness) and its neural correlates (electrophysiological markers, imaging-based anatomical and functional connectivity) have been proposed as critical across disparate neurological disorders. However, no study has examined the specific impact of neural (relative to autonomic) disturbances of cardiac interoception or their differential manifestations across neurological conditions.

Methods
Here, we used a computational approach to classify and evaluate which markers of cardiac interoception (behavioral, metacognitive, electrophysiological, volumetric, or functional) offer the best discrimination between neurological conditions and cardiac (hypertensive) disease (model 1), and among neurological conditions (Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementia, multiple sclerosis, and brain stroke; model 2). In total, the study comprised 52 neurological patients (mean [standard deviation] age = 55.1 [17.3] years; 37 women), 25 cardiac patients (age = 66.2 [9.1] years; 13 women), and 72 healthy controls (age = 52.65 [17.1] years; 50 women).

Results
Cardiac interoceptive outcomes successfully classified between neurological and cardiac conditions (model 1: >80% accuracy) but not among neurological conditions (model 2: 53% accuracy). Behavioral cardiac interoceptive alterations, although present in all conditions, were powerful in differentiating between neurological and cardiac diseases. However, among neurological conditions, cardiac interoceptive deficits presented more undifferentiated and unspecific disturbances across dimensions.

Conclusions
Our result suggests a diffuse pattern of interoceptive alterations across neurological conditions, highlighting their potential role as dimensional, transdiagnostic markers.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)850 - 861
JournalPsychosomatic Medicine
Volume82
Issue number9
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2020
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85095861999

Keywords

Library keywords