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The Nervous System and the Heart Edited By Gert J. Ter Horst. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. 2000. 564 pp. US$146.00 (hb). ISBN 0 896 03693 6

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Andrew Steptoe*
Affiliation:
British Heart Foundation Professor of Psychology, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, I–19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK
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Abstract

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Copyright © 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

The connections between the brain and heart are important in many ways, encompassing the regulation of normal cardiovascular activity, the development of disorders such as hypertension and coronary artery disease and understanding of the triggering of cardiac events and the emotional sequelae of acute myocardial infarction. A variety of disciplines contribute to knowledge of these processes. This substantial edited volume addresses the topic primarily from the neuroanatomical and physiological perspectives. The 13 contributions are predominantly review chapters, and are centred around five themes.

The first five chapters concern autonomic control of the heart, describing neuroanatomy and biochemistry, the brain regions involved in cardiac control and the regulation of circadian rhythms, and the specific roles of the insular cortex, infralimbic cortex and amygdala in organising cardiovascular responses. The effects of neuropathological conditions such as stroke, Parkinson's disease, headache and multiple sclerosis on autonomic cardiovascular control are discussed in a comprehensive chapter by researchers from Oulu in Finland.

The second section has a single chapter on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical activity and cardiovascular disorders, based primarily on rodent physiology. The third section contains four chapters on heart pain. This is an interesting issue, in that notwithstanding the lawful associations between myocardial ischaemia and pain in patients with angina pectoris, ischaemia of comparable intensity can occur without pain (silent ischaemia), while angina-like pain can occur in the absence of coronary vessel disease in syndrome X and other conditions. The chapters in this section review the neuroanatomy of cardiac nociceptive pathways, neurophysiology and neurotransmission. Rosen summarises his elegant series of functional neuroimaging studies that identified the brain regions activated during angina and suggest that the mechanisms for silent ischaemia and chest pain in syndrome X are central rather than peripheral in origin.

The fourth section of the book concerns humoral mediators, with chapters describing the renin angiotensin system in cardiovascular regulation and hypertension, and the role of inflammatory processes in atherogenesis. Ter Horst develops the stimulating notion that has been circulating for the past few years, without as yet much empirical support, that inflammatory mediators such as cytokines released peripherally in coronary artery disease contribute directly to the fatigue and mood disorders that follow cardiac events in some patients. Finally, Tulner and den Boer provide a thorough review of the relationship of cardiovascular disease to depression, anxiety and other disorders, and the mechanisms that might lead to increased cardiac morbidity in depression.

This book will be of greater interest to neurologists and biological psychiatrists than to those involved in liaison psychiatry, health psychology or the care of patients with coronary heart disease. The balance of topics covered is somewhat uneven, with much space being devoted to autonomic processes and cardiac pain and very little to behaviour, human emotion research or psychophysiology. The contributions are generally up to date but take no hostages, and there is a bewildering array of abbreviations for brain regions, neurotransmitters and peripheral mediators. This is definitely a book for the specialist.

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