Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where J. Andrew Armour is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by J. Andrew Armour.


The Journal of Physiology | 2013

Network interactions within the canine intrinsic cardiac nervous system: implications for reflex control of regional cardiac function

Eric Beaumont; Siamak Salavatian; E. Marie Southerland; Alain Vinet; Vincent Jacquemet; J. Andrew Armour; Jeffrey L. Ardell

•u2002 Control of regional cardiac function, as mediated by the intrinsic cardiac (IC) nervous system, is dependent upon its cardiac afferent neuronal inputs, changes in its central neuronal drive and interactions mediated within via local circuit neurons. •u2002 The majority of its local circuit neurons receive indirect central (sympathetic and parasympathetic) inputs, lesser proportions transducing the cardiac milieu. •u2002 Fifty per cent of IC neurons exhibit cardiac cycle‐related periodicity that is primarily related to direct cardiac mechano‐sensory afferent inputs and, secondarily, to indirect central autonomic efferent inputs. •u2002 In response to mediastinal nerve stimulation, most IC neurons became excessively activated in the induction of atrial arrhythmias such that their stochastic interactivity precedes and persists throughout neuronally induced atrial fibrillation. •u2002 Modulation of such stochastic IC local circuit neuronal recruitment may represent a novel target for the treatment of select cardiac disease, including atrial arrhythmias.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

Clinical neurocardiology defining the value of neuroscience‐based cardiovascular therapeutics

Kalyanam Shivkumar; Olujimi A. Ajijola; Inder S. Anand; J. Andrew Armour; Peng Sheng Chen; Murray Esler; Gaetano M. De Ferrari; Michael C. Fishbein; Jeffrey J. Goldberger; Ronald M. Harper; Michael J. Joyner; Sahib S. Khalsa; Rajesh Kumar; Richard D. Lane; Aman Mahajan; Sunny Po; Peter J. Schwartz; Virend K. Somers; Miguel Valderrábano; Marmar Vaseghi; Douglas P. Zipes

The autonomic nervous system regulates all aspects of normal cardiac function, and is recognized to play a critical role in the pathophysiology of many cardiovascular diseases. As such, the value of neuroscience‐based cardiovascular therapeutics is increasingly evident. This White Paper reviews the current state of understanding of human cardiac neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, pathophysiology in specific disease conditions, autonomic testing, risk stratification, and neuromodulatory strategies to mitigate the progression of cardiovascular diseases.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

Myocardial infarction induces structural and functional remodelling of the intrinsic cardiac nervous system.

Pradeep S. Rajendran; Keijiro Nakamura; Olujimi A. Ajijola; Marmar Vaseghi; J. Andrew Armour; Jeffrey L. Ardell; Kalyanam Shivkumar

Intrinsic cardiac (IC) neurons undergo differential morphological and phenotypic remodelling that reflects the site of myocardial infarction (MI). Afferent neural signals from the infarcted region to IC neurons are attenuated, while those from border and remote regions are preserved post‐MI, giving rise to a ‘neural sensory border zone’. Convergent IC local circuit (processing) neurons have enhanced transduction capacity following MI. Functional network connectivity within the intrinsic cardiac nervous system is reduced post‐MI. MI reduces the response and alters the characteristics of IC neurons to ventricular pacing.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Central-peripheral neural network interactions evoked by vagus nerve stimulation: functional consequences on control of cardiac function

Jeffrey L. Ardell; Pradeep S. Rajendran; Heath Nier; Bruce H. Kenknight; J. Andrew Armour

Using vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), we sought to determine the contribution of vagal afferents to efferent control of cardiac function. In anesthetized dogs, the right and left cervical vagosympathetic trunks were stimulated in the intact state, following ipsilateral or contralateral vagus nerve transection (VNTx), and then following bilateral VNTx. Stimulations were performed at currents from 0.25 to 4.0 mA, frequencies from 2 to 30 Hz, and a 500-μs pulse width. Right or left VNS evoked significantly greater current- and frequency-dependent suppression of chronotropic, inotropic, and lusitropic function subsequent to sequential VNTx. Bradycardia threshold was defined as the current first required for a 5% decrease in heart rate. The threshold for the right vs. left vagus-induced bradycardia in the intact state (2.91 ± 0.18 and 3.47 ± 0.20 mA, respectively) decreased significantly with right VNTx (1.69 ± 0.17 mA for right and 3.04 ± 0.27 mA for left) and decreased further following bilateral VNTx (1.29 ± 0.16 mA for right and 1.74 ± 0.19 mA for left). Similar effects were observed following left VNTx. The thresholds for afferent-mediated effects on cardiac parameters were 0.62 ± 0.04 and 0.65 ± 0.06 mA with right and left VNS, respectively, and were reflected primarily as augmentation. Afferent-mediated tachycardias were maintained following β-blockade but were eliminated by VNTx. The increased effectiveness and decrease in bradycardia threshold with sequential VNTx suggest that 1) vagal afferents inhibit centrally mediated parasympathetic efferent outflow and 2) the ipsilateral and contralateral vagi exert a substantial buffering capacity. The intact threshold reflects the interaction between multiple levels of the cardiac neural hierarchy.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Vagus nerve stimulation mitigates intrinsic cardiac neuronal and adverse myocyte remodeling postmyocardial infarction

Eric Beaumont; Elizabeth M Southerland; Jean C. Hardwick; Gary L. Wright; Shannon Ryan; Ying Li; Bruce H. Kenknight; J. Andrew Armour; Jeffrey L. Ardell

This paper aims to determine whether chronic vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) mitigates myocardial infarction (MI)-induced remodeling of the intrinsic cardiac nervous system (ICNS), along with the cardiac tissue it regulates. Guinea pigs underwent VNS implantation on the right cervical vagus. Two weeks later, MI was produced by ligating the ventral descending coronary artery. VNS stimulation started 7 days post-MI (20 Hz, 0.9 ± 0.2 mA, 14 s on, 48 s off; VNS-MI, n = 7) and was compared with time-matched MI animals with sham VNS (MI n = 7) vs. untreated controls (n = 8). Echocardiograms were performed before and at 90 days post-MI. At termination, IC neuronal intracellular voltage recordings were obtained from whole-mount neuronal plexuses. MI increased left ventricular end systolic volume (LVESV) 30% (P = 0.027) and reduced LV ejection fraction (LVEF) 6.5% (P < 0.001) at 90 days post-MI compared with baseline. In the VNS-MI group, LVESV and LVEF did not differ from baseline. IC neurons showed depolarization of resting membrane potentials and increased input resistance in MI compared with VNS-MI and sham controls (P < 0.05). Neuronal excitability and sensitivity to norepinephrine increased in MI and VNS-MI groups compared with controls (P < 0.05). Synaptic efficacy, as determined by evoked responses to stimulating input axons, was reduced in VNS-MI compared with MI or controls (P < 0.05). VNS induced changes in myocytes, consistent with enhanced glycogenolysis, and blunted the MI-induced increase in the proapoptotic Bcl-2-associated X protein (P < 0.05). VNS mitigates MI-induced remodeling of the ICNS, correspondingly preserving ventricular function via both neural and cardiomyocyte-dependent actions.


Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2014

Chronic spinal cord stimulation modifies intrinsic cardiac synaptic efficacy in the suppression of atrial fibrillation

Jeffrey L. Ardell; René Cardinal; Eric Beaumont; Michel Vermeulen; Frank M. Smith; J. Andrew Armour

We sought to determine whether spinal cord stimulation (SCS) therapy, when applied chronically to canines, imparts long-lasting cardio-protective effects on neurogenic atrial tachyarrhythmia induction and, if so, whether its effects can be attributable to i) changes in intrinsic cardiac (IC) neuronal transmembrane properties vs ii) modification of their interneuronal stochastic interactivity that initiates such pathology. Data derived from canines subjected to long-term SCS [(group 1: studied after 3-4 weeks SCS; n = 5) (group 2: studied after 5 weeks SCS; n = 11)] were compared to data derived from 10 control animals (including 4 sham SCS electrode implantations). During terminal studies conducted under anesthesia, chronotropic and inotropic responses to vagal nerve or stellate ganglion stimulation were similar in all 3 groups. Chronic SCS suppressed atrial tachyarrhythmia induction evoked by mediastinal nerve stimulation. When induced, arrhythmia durations were shortened (controls: median of 27 s; SCS 3-4 weeks: median of 16s; SCS 5 weeks: median of 7s). Phasic and accommodating right atrial neuronal somata displayed similar passive and active membrane properties in vitro, whether derived from sham or either chronic SCS group. Synaptic efficacy was differentially enhanced in accommodating (not phasic) IC neurons by chronic SCS. Taken together these data indicate that chronic SCS therapy modifies IC neuronal stochastic inter-connectivity in atrial fibrillation suppression by altering synaptic function without directly targeting the transmembrane properties of individual IC neuronal somata.


Heart Rhythm | 2016

Targeted stellate decentralization: Implications for sympathetic control of ventricular electrophysiology☆

Una Buckley; Kentaro Yamakawa; Tatsuo Takamiya; J. Andrew Armour; Kalyanam Shivkumar; Jeffrey L. Ardell

BACKGROUNDnSelective bilateral cervicothoracic sympathectomy has proven to be effective for managing ventricular arrhythmias in the setting of structural heart disease. In the procedure currently used, the caudal portions of both stellate ganglia along with thoracic chain ganglia down to T4 ganglia are removed.nnnOBJECTIVEnThe purpose of this study was to define the relative contributions of the T1-T2 and T3-T4 paravertebral ganglia in modulating ventricular electrical function.nnnMETHODSnIn anesthetized vagotomized porcine subjects (n = 8), the heart was exposed via sternotomy along with right and left paravertebral sympathetic ganglia to the T4 level. A 56-electrode epicardial sock was placed over both ventricles to assess epicardial activation-recovery intervals (ARIs) in response to individually stimulating right and left stellate vs T3 paravertebral ganglia. Responses to T3 stimuli were repeated after surgical removal of the caudal portions of stellate ganglia and T2 bilaterally.nnnRESULTSnIn intact preparations, stellate ganglion vs T3 stimuli (4 Hz, 4-ms duration) were titrated to produce equivalent decreases in global ventricular ARIs (right side: 85 ± 6 ms vs 55 ± 10 ms; left side: 24 ± 3 ms vs 17 ± 7 ms). Threshold of stimulus intensity applied to T3 ganglia to achieve threshold was 3 times that of T1 threshold. ARIs in unstimulated states were unaffected by bilateral stellate-T2 ganglion removal. After acute decentralization, T3 stimulation failed to change ARIs.nnnCONCLUSIONnPreganglionic sympathetic efferents arising from the T1-T4 spinal cord that project to the heart transit through stellate ganglia via the paravertebral chain. Thus, T1-T2 surgical excision is sufficient to functionally interrupt central control of peripheral sympathetic efferent activity.


Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2012

Activated cranial cervical cord neurons affect left ventricular infarct size and the potential for sudden cardiac death

E. Marie Southerland; David D. Gibbons; S. Brooks Smith; Adam Sipe; Carole A. Williams; Eric Beaumont; J. Andrew Armour; Robert D. Foreman; Jeffrey L. Ardell

To evaluate whether cervical spinal neurons can influence cardiac indices and myocyte viability in the acutely ischemic heart, the hearts of anesthetized rabbits subjected to 30 min of LAD coronary arterial occlusion (CAO) were studied 3h after reperfusion. Control animals were compared to those exposed to pre-emptive high cervical cord stimulation (SCS; the dorsal aspect of the C1-C2 spinal cord was stimulated electrically at 50 Hz; 0.2 ms; 90% of motor threshold, starting 15 min prior to and continuing throughout CAO). Four groups of animals were so tested: 1) neuroaxis intact; 2) prior cervical vagotomy; 3) prior transection of the dorsal spinal columns at C6; and 4) following pharmacological treatment [muscarinic (atropine) or adrenergic (atenolol, prazosin or yohimbine) receptor blockade]. Infarct size (IS) was measured by tetrazolium, expressed as percentage of risk zone. C1-C2 SCS reduced acute ischemia induced IS by 43%, without changing the incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD). While SCS-induced reduction in IS was unaffected by vagotomy, it was no longer evident following transection of C6 dorsal columns or atropinization. Beta-adrenoceptor blockade eliminated ischemia induced SCD, while alpha-receptor blockade doubled its incidence. During SCS, myocardial ischemia induced SCD was eliminated following vagotomy while remaining unaffected by atropinization. These data indicate that, in contrast to thoracic spinal neurons, i) cranial cervical spinal neurons affect both adrenergic and cholinergic motor outflows to the heart such that ii) their activation modifies ventricular infarct size and lethal arrhythmogenesis.


Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2016

Pathological effects of chronic myocardial infarction on peripheral neurons mediating cardiac neurotransmission.

Keijiro Nakamura; Olujimi A. Ajijola; Eric Aliotta; J. Andrew Armour; Jeffrey L. Ardell; Kalyanam Shivkumar

OBJECTIVEnTo determine whether chronic myocardial infarction (MI) induces structural and neurochemical changes in neurons within afferent and efferent ganglia mediating cardiac neurotransmission.nnnMETHODSnNeuronal somata in i) right atrial (RAGP) and ii) ventral interventricular ganglionated plexi (VIVGP), iii) stellate ganglia (SG) and iv) T1-2 dorsal root ganglia (DRG) bilaterally derived from normal (n=8) vs. chronic MI (n=8) porcine subjects were studied. We examined whether the morphology and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) expression in soma of RAGP, VIVGP, DRG and SG neurons were altered as a consequence of chronic MI. In DRG, we also examined immunoreactivity of calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), a marker of afferent neurons. Chronic MI increased neuronal size and nNOS immunoreactivity in VIVGP (but not RAGP), as well as in the SG bilaterally. Across these ganglia, the increase in neuronal size was more pronounced in nNOS immunoreactive neurons. In the DRG, chronic MI also caused neuronal enlargement, and increased CGRP immunoreactivity. Further, DRG neurons expressing both nNOS and CGRP were increased in MI animals compared to controls, and represented a shift from double negative neurons.nnnCONCLUSIONSnChronic MI impacts diverse elements within the peripheral cardiac neuraxis. That chronic MI imposes such widespread, diverse remodeling of the peripheral cardiac neuraxis must be taken into consideration when contemplating neuronal regulation of the ischemic heart.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2016

Central vs. peripheral neuraxial sympathetic control of porcine ventricular electrophysiology

Kentaro Yamakawa; Kimberly Howard-Quijano; Wei Zhou; Pradeep S. Rajendran; Marmar Vaseghi; Olujimi A. Ajijola; J. Andrew Armour; Kalyanam Shivkumar; Jeffrey L. Ardell; Aman Mahajan

Sympathoexcitation is associated with ventricular arrhythmogenesis. The aim of this study was to determine the role of thoracic dorsal root afferent neural inputs to the spinal cord in modulating ventricular sympathetic control of normal heart electrophysiology. We hypothesize that dorsal root afferent input tonically modulates basal and evoked efferent sympathetic control of the heart. A 56-electrode sock placed on the epicardial ventricle in anesthetized Yorkshire pigs (n = 17) recorded electrophysiological function, as well as activation recovery interval (ARI) and dispersion in ARI, at baseline conditions and during stellate ganglion electrical stimulation. Measures were compared between intact states and sequential unilateral T1-T4 dorsal root transection (DRTx), ipsilateral ventral root transection (VRTx), and contralateral dorsal and ventral root transections (DVRTx). Left or right DRTx decreased global basal ARI [Lt.DRTx: 369 ± 12 to 319 ± 13 ms (P < 0.01) and Rt.DRTx: 388 ± 19 to 356 ± 15 ms (P < 0.01)]. Subsequent unilateral VRTx followed by contralateral DRx+VRTx induced no further change. In intact states, left and right stellate ganglion stimulation shortened ARIs (6 ± 2% vs. 17 ± 3%), while increasing dispersion (+139% vs. +88%). There was no difference in magnitude of ARI or dispersion change with stellate stimulation following spinal root transections. Interruption of thoracic spinal afferent signaling results in enhanced basal cardiac sympathoexcitability without diminishing the sympathetic response to stellate ganglion stimulation. This suggests spinal dorsal root transection releases spinal cord-mediated tonic inhibitory control of efferent sympathetic tone, while maintaining intrathoracic cardiocentric neural networks.

Collaboration


Dive into the J. Andrew Armour's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Beaumont

East Tennessee State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marmar Vaseghi

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. Marie Southerland

East Tennessee State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alain Vinet

Université de Montréal

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vincent Jacquemet

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge