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Review
. 2010 Apr;84(1):13-25.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2010.02.005. Epub 2010 Mar 6.

Cortico-limbic circuitry and the airways: insights from functional neuroimaging of respiratory afferents and efferents

Affiliations
Review

Cortico-limbic circuitry and the airways: insights from functional neuroimaging of respiratory afferents and efferents

Karleyton C Evans. Biol Psychol. 2010 Apr.

Abstract

After nearly two decades of active research, functional neuroimaging has demonstrated utility in the identification of cortical, limbic, and paralimbic (cortico-limbic) brain regions involved in respiratory control and respiratory perception. Before the recent boon of human neuroimaging studies, the location of the principal components of respiratory-related cortico-limbic circuitry had been unknown and their function had been poorly understood. Emerging neuroimaging evidence in both healthy and patient populations suggests that cognitive and emotional/affective processing within cortico-limbic circuitry modulates respiratory control and respiratory perception. This paper will review functional neuroimaging studies of respiration with a focus on whole brain investigations of sensorimotor pathways that have identified respiratory-related neural circuitry known to overlap emotional/affective cortico-limbic circuitry. To aid the interpretation of present and future findings, the complexities and challenges underlying neuroimaging methodologies will also be reviewed as applied to the study of respiration physiology.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Proposed cortico-limbic model for respiratory sensorimotor integration. Regional color-coding follows the same scheme presented in Table 1: blue, predominant motor functionality; red, predominant sensory functionality; purple, mixed sensorimotor functionality. Abbreviations: ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; KF/PB, Kölliker–Fuse/parabrachial nuclei; LC, locus ceruleus; NTS, nucleus tract of solitarius; PAG, periaqueductal grey; SMA supplementary motor area.

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