Title | Short-term food deprivation increases amplitudes of heartbeat-evoked potentials. | ||
Author | Schulz, Andre; Ferreira de Sa, Diana S; Dierolf, Angelika M; Lutz, Annika; van Dyck, Zoe; Vogele, Claus; Schachinger, Hartmut | ||
Journal | Psychophysiology | Publication Year/Month | 2015-May |
PMID | 25431244 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation | 1.Institute for Health and Behaviour, Research Unit INSIDE, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg; Institute of Psychobiology, Division of Clinical Psychophysiology, University of Trier, Trier, Germany. |
Nutritional state (i.e., fasting or nonfasting) may affect the processing of interoceptive signals, but mechanisms underlying this effect remain unclear. We investigated 16 healthy women on two separate days: when satiated (standardized food intake) and after an 18-h food deprivation period. On both days, heartbeat-evoked potentials (HEPs) and cardiac and autonomic nervous system activation indices (heart rate, normalized low frequency heart rate variability [nLF HRV]) were assessed. The HEP is an EEG pattern that is considered an index of cortical representation of afferent cardiovascular signals. Average HEP activity (R wave +455-595 ms) was enhanced during food deprivation compared to normal food intake. Cardiac activation did not differ between nutritional conditions. Our results indicate that short-term food deprivation amplifies an electrophysiological correlate of the cortical representation of visceral-afferent signals originating from the cardiovascular system. This effect could not be attributed to increased cardiac activation, as estimated by heart rate and nLF HRV, after food deprivation.