Entrainment of spontaneous cerebral hemodynamic oscillations to behavioral responses
•Intrinsic hemoglobin oscillations can be entrained to periodic movements at 0.1Hz.•Voluntary movements can be entrained to intrinsic 0.1Hz hemoglobin oscillations.•Both types of entrainment are basically related. Entrainment in physiological systems can be manifest in cases where phase-coupling (sy...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroscience letters 2014-04, Vol.566, p.93-97 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Intrinsic hemoglobin oscillations can be entrained to periodic movements at 0.1Hz.•Voluntary movements can be entrained to intrinsic 0.1Hz hemoglobin oscillations.•Both types of entrainment are basically related.
Entrainment in physiological systems can be manifest in cases where phase-coupling (synchronization) between slow intrinsic oscillations and periodic motor responses, or vice versa, takes place. To test whether voluntary movement has something in common with entrainment of slow hemodynamic oscillations to motor responses, we studied blood pressure (BP), heart rate beat-to-beat intervals (RRI) and prefrontal (de)oxyhemoglobin (Hb/HbO2) during 5min of rest, 10min of self-paced, voluntary movements and 10min of stimulus-paced movements at 10s intervals in 9 subjects. Subjects were divided into 2 groups according to the timing of voluntary finger movements. It appeared that these movements occurred at relatively regular intervals of approximately 10s in 5 subjects (group A); while 4 subjects showed random or very short inter-movement intervals (group B).
Two remarkable results were obtained: first, the phase coupling (COH2) between BP and RRI showed a significant (p=0.0061) interaction between activity (rest vs. movement) and group (A vs. B), with an increased (p=0.0003) coupling in group A. Second, the COH2 between BP and Hb oscillations showed a significant (p=0.034) interaction between activity and group, with a decreased (p=0.079) coupling in group B.
These results suggest that subjects able to initiate self-paced, voluntary movements at relatively regular intervals of ∼10s show an entrainment potential between physiological oscillations and motor responses. This also provides the first evidence that not only physiological oscillations can be entrained to motor responses, but also motor responses (voluntary movements) can be entrained to slow intrinsic oscillations. |
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ISSN: | 0304-3940 1872-7972 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neulet.2014.02.037 |