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Ageing, the autonomic nervous system and arrhythmia: From brain to heart
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Ageing, the autonomic nervous system and arrhythmia: From brain to heart

Karan R. Chadda, Olujimi A. Ajijola, Marmar Vaseghi, Kalyanam Shivkumar, Christopher L.-H. Huang and Kamalan Jeevaratnam
Ageing research reviews, Vol.48, pp.40-50
12/2018
PMID: 30300712

Abstract

Ageing Arrhythmia Autonomic nervous system Ion channelopathy Neuromodulation
•Cardiac ANS possess cardiocentric local reflex control central to arrhythmogenesis.•Ageing myocardium undergoes alterations leading to arrhythmogenic triggers/substrate.•Accelerated ageing of cardiac ANS can be caused by pathological situations.•Therapeutic strategies targeting cardiac ANS is advantageous in ageing patients.•Dietary interventions slow cardiac ageing and modulate ANS reducing arrhythmic risk. An ageing myocardium possesses significant electrophysiological alterations that predisposes the elderly patient to arrhythmic risk. Whilst these alterations are intrinsic to the cardiac myocytes, they are modulated by the cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS) and consequently, ageing of the cardiac ANS is fundamental to the development of arrhythmias. A systems-based approach that incorporates the influence of the cardiac ANS could lead to better mechanistic understanding of how arrhythmogenic triggers and substrates interact spatially and temporally to produce sustained arrhythmia and why its incidence increases with age. Despite the existence of physiological oscillations of ANS activity on the heart, pathological oscillations can lead to defective activation and recovery properties of the myocardium. Such changes can be attributable to the decrease in functionality and structural alterations to ANS specific receptors in the myocardium with age. These altered ANS adaptive responses can occur either as a normal ageing process or accelerated in the presence of specific cardiac pathologies, such as genetic mutations or neurodegenerative conditions. Targeted intervention that seek to manipulate the ageing ANS influence on the myocardium may prove to be an efficacious approach for the management of arrhythmia in the ageing population.

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