Literature DB >> 12653181

Graded response of heart rate variability, associated with an alteration of geomagnetic activity in a subarctic area.

S Oinuma1, Y Kubo, K Otsuka, T Yamanaka, S Murakami, O Matsuoka, S Ohkawa, G Cornélissen, A Weydahl, B Holmeslet, C Hall, F Halberg.   

Abstract

It is becoming recognized that geomagnetic activity may influence biological processes, including the incidence of various human diseases. There is evidence that heart rate variability (HRV) may serve not only as an index of autonomic coordination of the circulation, but also as a powerful predictor of risk in apparently healthy subjects. This study focuses on the effects of geomagnetic disturbance on HRV, by comparing different indices of HRV of young, healthy men living in a subarctic area on days of low (Ap; 0-7), middle (Ap; 7-20), and high (Ap; 20-45) geomagnetic activity. The effect of geomagnetic disturbance on HRV is examined on the basis of 7-day records by Holter ECG, obtained longitudinally on 5 clinically healthy men, 21-31 years of age, in Alta, Norway (70 degree N). Frequency- and time-domain measures of HRV were analyzed for each subject on separate 24-hour spans. A graded alteration of HRV endpoints was found in association with increased geomagnetic activity. As time-domain measures of HRV, SDNNIDX and the 90% length of the Lorenz plot decreased statistically significantly on days with increased geomagnetic disturbance (p = 0.0144 and p = 0.0102, respectively). A graded decrease in frequency-domain HRV measures was also validated statistically for the total spectral power (decrease of 18.1% and 31.6% on days when 7 < Ap < 20 and 20 < Ap < 45 versus days when Ap < 7; p = 0.0013). The decrease in spectral power was mainly found at frequencies below 0.04 Hz, in the "ultra-low-frequency" (0.0001-0.003 Hz; 18.1% and 27.5% decrease, respectively; p = 0.0102) and "very-low-frequency" (0.003-0.04 Hz; 12.9% and 28.6% decrease, respectively; p = 0.0209) regions of the spectrum. The decrease in spectral power was much less pronounced around 10.5 sec ("low frequency"; N.S.) and around 3.6 sec ("high frequency"; N.S.). Evidence is provided here that HRV decreases on magnetically disturbed days, and that it does so in a dose-dependent fashion, HRV being depressed more on days when 20 < Ap < 45 than on days when 7 < Ap < 20, by comparison with days when Ap < 7. This graded response of HRV to geomagnetic activity should encourage us to search for human magnetoreceptors and for a better understanding of putative mechanisms of magnetoreception.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12653181     DOI: 10.1016/s0753-3322(02)00303-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother        ISSN: 0753-3322            Impact factor:   6.529


  8 in total

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2.  Are stress responses to geomagnetic storms mediated by the cryptochrome compass system?

Authors:  James Close
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4.  Synchronization of Human Autonomic Nervous System Rhythms with Geomagnetic Activity in Human Subjects.

Authors:  Rollin McCraty; Mike Atkinson; Viktor Stolc; Abdullah A Alabdulgader; Alfonsas Vainoras; Minvydas Ragulskis
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5.  Long-Term Study of Heart Rate Variability Responses to Changes in the Solar and Geomagnetic Environment.

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Review 7.  Some Near- and Far-Environmental Effects on Human Health and Disease with a Focus on the Cardiovascular System.

Authors:  Germaine Cornelissen Guillaume; Denis Gubin; Larry A Beaty; Kuniaki Otsuka
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8.  Astronauts well-being and possibly anti-aging improved during long-duration spaceflight.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-07-21       Impact factor: 4.379

  8 in total

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