In many Asian languages, the same ancient letter/symbol is used for heart and mind. For the last couple of millennia, physicians and scientists across different civilizations have posited close links between the brain and heart, even arguing that the site of intelligence and emotions is in one of these two organs. Through an integrative empirical approach in modern biology/physiology and behavioral sciences, much has since been learned to confirm the anatomical and functional links between the brain and the heart. Arguably, the ultimate applicability of this knowledge will advance our health and improve disease treatment.

Modern medicine is characterized by a high degree of specialization, and the heart-brain connection is typically considered from the point of view of a particular medical specialty. Hence, focusing on the brain, for example, in neurology, cardiovascular involvement is critical in certain pathologies such as stroke and vascular dementia. In cardiology, on the other hand, the influence of the brain becomes clearly apparent in “the broken heart syndrome” (also known as acute stress cardiomyopathy). However, recent epidemiological studies point to new associations that typically present as co-occurring pathologies of both the brain and the heart. A case in point is the association between depression and coronary heart disease. Such co-occurrences have stimulated research into possible novel mechanisms that could be targeted to treat these complex cardiovascular/brain disorders.

At least three scenarios could be at play in these illnesses: (i) the primary pathological mechanism in the nervous system triggers a cardiovascular pathology by disrupting physiological links between the two systems (hence, the term “psychogenic”cardiovascular disease), (ii) the primary pathological mechanism in the cardiovascular system triggers a nervous system dysfunction (e.g., atherosclerosis leading to ischemic conditions causes subsequent cognitive impairment), and (iii) the primary pathology is in a biological mechanism that is normally operative in both the nervous and the cardiovascular systems, thus causing the co-occurrence of pathologies (i.e., the co-occurring pathologies share a pathobiological mechanism but do not necessarily cause each other).

To be successful, research in co-occurring cardiovascular and brain disorders needs contributions from multiple medical specialties, including psychiatry, neurology, medicine, and cardiology. It should encompass clinical and basic research as well as the development of therapeutic approaches. The purpose of Cardiovascular Psychiatry and Neurology is to provide a platform for the latest research and for timely and expert reviews and comments in the emerging field of cardiovascular psychiatry and neurology. Although the term cardiovascular psychiatry and neurology is introduced here for the first time, retrieving publications from PubMed using either cardiovascular psychiatry or cardiovascular neurology generates relevant information (oftentimes because the terms psychiatry or neurology appear in the tile of a journal publishing the work). A quick survey of PubMed for the publication period from 1940 to 2008 (Table 1) revealed, not surprisingly, that the number of items per search term has increased dramatically over the years. Whereas the term cardiovascular showed a sharp increase in the early sixties, both neurology and psychiatry “exploded” in the early nineties. Even though the term cardiovascular psychiatry appeared earlier than cardiovascular neurology, the later term has become more prevalent since the early sixties (Table 1). Normalizing the data, that is, by expressing cardiovascular psychiatry as a percentage of corresponding psychiatry and cardiovascular neurology as a percentage of the corresponding neurology (Figure 1), showed that cardiovascular neurology rose sharply in the early sixties and has remained at about 5% of all neurology-related items. On the other hand, cardiovascular psychiatry had been below 1% of all psychiatry-related items until the early eighties, but has gradually increased. Possibly, the ischemia-related brain disorders have contributed to the relatively high presence of cardiovascular neurology and the relatively recent revelation of an unsuspected association of cardiovascular disorders with mood disorders might have contributed to the increase in cardiovascular psychiatry. The journal Cardiovascular Psychiatry and Neurology was created to provide for the first time a unified forum to consider the physiological and pathological interactions between the nervous and the cardiovascular systems. The journal aims to stimulate the development of relevant interdisciplinary and collaborative biomedical research and to foster multidisciplinary efforts in advancing medical practices.

Hari Manev