Literature DB >> 1410177

Respiratory sinus arrhythmia and cardiovascular responses to stress.

J D Lane1, R A Adcock, R E Burnett.   

Abstract

The parasympathetic nervous system provides mechanisms that could attenuate sympathetically mediated heart rate stress responses and might have even more general antagonistic actions on stress reactivity. Individuals characterized by higher levels of parasympathetic tone might, through such mechanisms, be less reactive when stimuli elicit sympathetically mediated responses. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is considered to be a noninvasive index of cardiac parasympathetic (vagal) tone. The present study investigated whether individual differences in RSA level at rest could predict variations among individuals in the magnitude of cardiovascular responses to psychological stress. None of the measures of resting respiratory sinus arrhythmia, derived from spectral analysis of beat-to-beat changes in resting heart rate, predicted the observed variations in cardiovascular task reactivity. However, scores reflecting respiratory sinus arrhythmia as the percentage of total heart rate variability (RSAnorm) were negatively correlated with blood pressure levels, both at rest and during the task. Furthermore, subjects with higher scores for RSAnorm demonstrated a faster adaptation of heart rate responses during stress, which suggests the development of parasympathetic antagonism to ongoing sympathetic arousal. Although a simple relationship between respiratory sinus arrhythmia and reactivity was not observed, these results encourage further investigation of RSA measures as psychophysiological indices of individual differences in parasympathetic (vagal) cardiac tone, or perhaps of general parasympathetic/sympathetic balance, which could modulate the expression of potentially pathogenic stress responses.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1410177     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.1992.tb01720.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychophysiology        ISSN: 0048-5772            Impact factor:   4.016


  13 in total

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4.  Examining the Prospective Relationship between Pre-Disaster Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia and Post-Disaster Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms in Children.

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5.  Low vagal tone magnifies the association between psychosocial stress exposure and internalizing psychopathology in adolescents.

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Review 6.  Autonomic nervous system correlates of posttraumatic stress symptoms in youth: Meta-analysis and qualitative review.

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7.  Maternal respiratory sinus arrhythmia contextualizes the relation between maternal anxiety and overprotective parenting.

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8.  The effects of constrained left versus right monocular viewing on the autonomic nervous system.

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Journal:  Biol Psychol       Date:  2014-05-27       Impact factor: 3.251

9.  Comparing a genetic and a psychological factor as correlates of anxiety, depression, and chronic stress in men with prostate cancer.

Authors:  Christopher F Sharpley; David R H Christie; Vicki Bitsika; Nicholas M Andronicos; Linda L Agnew; Timothy M Richards; Mary E McMillan
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Review 10.  A possible mechanism for PTSD symptoms in patients with traumatic brain injury: central autonomic network disruption.

Authors:  John B Williamson; Kenneth M Heilman; Eric C Porges; Damon G Lamb; Stephen W Porges
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