Literature DB >> 1824116

Time of night effects on heart rate variation in normal neonates.

V L Schechtman1, R M Harper.   

Abstract

Circadian patterns have been observed in infants as early as the first few postnatal days. We hypothesized that, in each sleep-waking state, heart rate variation in several distinct frequency bands would show consistent variations across a night in newborn infants. Twelve-hour night-time recordings of EEG, ECG, EOG, digastric EMG, respiratory movements, and CO2 were obtained from 25 normal full-term infants at 2-7 days postnatal age. The extents of three types of heart rate variation were determined for all epochs identified as quiet sleep, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and waking during each 4-hr period of the night. In particular states, the extent of all three types of heart rate variation decreased from the evening (7-11pm) to the late night (11pm-3am). Heart rate variation at the respiratory frequency showed such a time-of-night effect in quiet sleep only, resulting in a significant sleep state effect on respiratory sinus arrhythmia during the evening that disappeared later in the night. Previous studies have indicated that respiratory sinus arrhythmia is enhanced during quiet sleep, relative to other states, after 3 mo of age; the present findings suggest that the tendency for enhancement during quiet sleep is present even in the neonate, although this tendency is only expressed during the evening. Results indicate that time-of-night effects on heart rate variation are not constant across physiological states in neonates, and heart rate variation during the waking state is particularly unresponsive to these time-of-night influences.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1824116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Physiol        ISSN: 0141-9846


  1 in total

1.  Normalizing electrocardiograms of both healthy persons and cardiovascular disease patients for biometric authentication.

Authors:  Meixue Yang; Bin Liu; Miaomiao Zhao; Fan Li; Guoqing Wang; Fengfeng Zhou
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-20       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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