Brain responses associated with consciousness of breathlessness (air hunger)

M Liotti, S Brannan, G Egan, R Shade… - Proceedings of the …, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
M Liotti, S Brannan, G Egan, R Shade, L Madden, B Abplanalp, R Robillard, J Lancaster
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001National Acad Sciences
Little is known about the physiological mechanisms subserving the experience of air hunger
and the affective control of breathing in humans. Acute hunger for air after inhalation of CO2
was studied in nine healthy volunteers with positron emission tomography. Subjective
breathlessness was manipulated while end-tidal CO2-was held constant. Subjects
experienced a significantly greater sense of air hunger breathing through a face mask than
through a mouthpiece. The statistical contrast between the two conditions delineated a …
Little is known about the physiological mechanisms subserving the experience of air hunger and the affective control of breathing in humans. Acute hunger for air after inhalation of CO2 was studied in nine healthy volunteers with positron emission tomography. Subjective breathlessness was manipulated while end-tidal CO2- was held constant. Subjects experienced a significantly greater sense of air hunger breathing through a face mask than through a mouthpiece. The statistical contrast between the two conditions delineated a distributed network of primarily limbic/paralimbic brain regions, including multiple foci in dorsal anterior and middle cingulate gyrus, insula/claustrum, amygdala/periamygdala, lingual and middle temporal gyrus, hypothalamus, pulvinar, and midbrain. This pattern of activations was confirmed by a correlational analysis with breathlessness ratings. The commonality of regions of mesencephalon, diencephalon and limbic/paralimbic areas involved in primal emotions engendered by the basic vegetative systems including hunger for air, thirst, hunger, pain, micturition, and sleep, is discussed with particular reference to the cingulate gyrus. A theory that the phylogenetic origin of consciousness came from primal emotions engendered by immediate threat to the existence of the organism is discussed along with an alternative hypothesis by Edelman that primary awareness emerged with processes of ongoing perceptual categorization giving rise to a scene [Edelman, G. M. (1992) Bright Air, Brilliant Fire (Penguin, London)].
National Acad Sciences