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Sex differences in insular cortex gyri responses to a brief static handgrip challenge.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Cardiovascular disease varies between sexes, suggesting male-female autonomic control differences. Insular gyri help coordinate autonomic regulation and show a sex-dependent response to a sympathetic challenge.

Methods

We examined sex-related insular gyral responses to a short static handgrip exercise challenge eliciting parasympathetic withdrawal with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during four 16-s challenges (80% maximum strength) in 23 healthy females (age; mean?±?std 50?±?8 years) and 40 males (46?±?9 years). Heart rate (HR) and fMRI signals were compared with repeated measures ANOVA (P?ResultsFemales showed higher resting HR than males, but smaller percent HR change increases to the challenges. All gyri showed fMRI patterns concurrent with an HR peak and decline to baseline. fMRI signals followed an anterior-posterior organization in both sexes, but lateralization varied by gyri and sex. All subjects showed greater signals in the anterior vs. posterior gyri (females 0.3%, males 0.15%). The middle gyri showed no lateralization in females but left-sided dominance in males (0.1%). The posterior gyri showed greater left than right activation in both sexes. The anterior-most gyri exhibited a prominent sex difference, with females showing a greater right-sided activation (0.2%) vs. males displaying a greater left-sided activation (0.15%). Age and handedness affected a minority of findings but did not alter the overall pattern of results.

Conclusions

The anterior insula plays a greater role in cardiovascular regulation than posterior areas during a predominantly parasympathetic withdrawal challenge, with opposite lateralization between sexes. In females, the left anterior-most gyrus responded distinctly from other regions than males. Those sex-specific structural and functional brain patterns may contribute over time to variations in cardiovascular disease between the sexes.

SUBMITTER: Macey PM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5397762 | biostudies-literature | 2017

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Sex differences in insular cortex gyri responses to a brief static handgrip challenge.

Macey Paul M PM   Rieken Nicholas S NS   Ogren Jennifer A JA   Macey Katherine E KE   Kumar Rajesh R   Harper Ronald M RM  

Biology of sex differences 20170420


<h4>Background</h4>Cardiovascular disease varies between sexes, suggesting male-female autonomic control differences. Insular gyri help coordinate autonomic regulation and show a sex-dependent response to a sympathetic challenge.<h4>Methods</h4>We examined sex-related insular gyral responses to a short static handgrip exercise challenge eliciting parasympathetic withdrawal with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during four 16-s challenges (80% maximum strength) in 23 healthy females (  ...[more]

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