Literature DB >> 10229736

Dynamic behavior of heart rate in ischemic stroke.

J T Korpelainen1, K A Sotaniemi, A Mäkikallio, H V Huikuri, V V Myllylä.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Traditional spectral and nonspectral methods have shown that heart rate (HR) variability is reduced after stroke. Some patients with poor outcome, however, show randomlike, complex patterns of HR behavior that traditional analysis techniques are unable to quantify. Therefore, we designed the present study to evaluate the complexity and correlation properties of HR dynamics after stroke by using new analysis methods based on nonlinear dynamics and fractals ("chaos theory").
METHODS: In addition to the traditional spectral components of HR variability, we measured instantaneous beat-to-beat variability and long-term continuous variability analyzed from Poincaré plots, fractal correlation properties, and approximate entropy of R-R interval dynamics from 24-hour ambulatory ECG recordings in 30 healthy control subjects, 31 hemispheric stroke patients, and 15 brain stem stroke patients (8 medullary, 7 pontine) in the acute phase of stroke and 6 months after stroke.
RESULTS: In the acute phase, the traditional spectral components of HR variability and the long-term continuous variability from Poincaré plots were impaired (P<0.01) in patients with hemispheric and medullary brain stem stroke, but not in patients with pontine brain stem stroke, in comparison with control subjects. At 6 months after stroke, measures of HR variability in hemispheric stroke patients were still lower (P<0.05) than those of the control subjects. Various complexity and fractal measures of HR variability were similar in patients and control subjects. The conventional frequency domain measures of HR variability as well as the Poincaré measures showed strong correlations (Pearson correlation coefficient, r=0.68 to r=0.90) with each other but only weak correlations (r=0.09 to r=0.56) with the complexity and fractal measures of HR variability.
CONCLUSIONS: Hemispheric and medullary brain stem infarctions seem to damage the cardiovascular autonomic regulatory system and appear as abnormalities in the magnitude of HR variability. These abnormalities can be more easily detected with the use of analysis methods of HR variability, which are based on moment statistics, than by methods based on nonlinear dynamics. Abnormal HR variability may be involved in prognostically unfavorable cardiac complications and other known manifestations of autonomic failure associated with stroke.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10229736     DOI: 10.1161/01.str.30.5.1008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke        ISSN: 0039-2499            Impact factor:   7.914


  29 in total

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4.  Cardiovascular autonomic function in lateral medullary infarction.

Authors:  Ji Man Hong; Tae Jin Kim; Dong Hoon Shin; Jin Soo Lee; In Soo Joo
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5.  Ambulatory ECG and analysis of heart rate variability in Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  T H Haapaniemi; V Pursiainen; J T Korpelainen; H V Huikuri; K A Sotaniemi; V V Myllylä
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 10.154

6.  Heart rate variability in stroke patients submitted to an acute bout of aerobic exercise.

Authors:  Rodrigo Daminello Raimundo; Luiz Carlos de Abreu; Fernando Adami; Franciele Marques Vanderlei; Tatiana Dias de Carvalho; Isadora Lessa Moreno; Valdelias Xavier Pereira; Vitor Engracia Valenti; Monica Akemi Sato
Journal:  Transl Stroke Res       Date:  2013-05-22       Impact factor: 6.829

7.  Breathing Irregularity Is Independently Associated With the Severity of Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Patients With Multiple System Atrophy.

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8.  Cardiac Effects of Stroke.

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Review 9.  Cerebrogenic cardiac arrhythmias: cortical lateralization and clinical significance.

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Review 10.  Brain-Heart Interaction: Cardiac Complications After Stroke.

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Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2017-08-04       Impact factor: 17.367

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