Title | Does maladaptive cardiovagal modulation extend to gastric modulation in women with chronic pelvic pain? | ||
Author | Williams, DeWayne; Muth, Eric; Thayer, Julian; Chelimsky, Thomas; Chelimsky, Gisela | ||
Journal | Neurourol Urodyn | Publication Year/Month | 2021-Jan |
PMID | 33045119 | PMCID | PMC7902291 |
Affiliation + expend | 1.Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, California, USA. |
BACKGROUND: Women with chronic pelvic pain (CPP) have poor cardiovagal modulation. It is unclear whether this finding reflects a broader abnormality across many systems such as gastro-vagal modulation. AIM: To determine if maladaptive cardiovagal activity in females with CPP is accompanied by maladaptive gastric myoelectric activity. METHODS: A total of 36 health controls (HC) and 75 CPP underwent supine (10 min), then upright (tilted 70 degrees head up; 30 min), and back to supine (10 min) positions. High-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV; 0.15-0.4 Hz) was measured as an index of cardiovagal activity. Cutaneous electrogastrography (EGG) assessed gastric myoelectric activity pre- and during-upright tilt. EGG measures from 16 HC and 31 CPP patients were available for analysis and included relative percentage of gastric activity within the normal (2-4 cpm) and tachygastria (4-10 cpm) ranges, plus ratio of normal/tachygastria. RESULTS: HF-HRV was lower in CPP individuals at all time points (each p < .05). CPP individuals showed lesser decrease in HF-HRV from supine to upright, and poorer HF-HRV recovery from upright back to supine (F[1, 106] = 4.62, p = .034). HC showed increase in tachygastria activity (t[15] = -2.09, p = .054) while the CPP group showed no change in tachygastria activity from pre-upright to upright (t[30] = -0.62, p = .537). CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with CPP going from supine to upright demonstrate an impairment in both tachygastria and the parallel decrement in HRV. These results support the hypothesis of a generalized blunting in the physiological modulation in CPP individuals affecting both cardiovascular and gastric systems.