| Literature DB >> 20172786 |
Rebeca Goya-Esteban1, Inmaculada Mora-Jiménez, José Luis Rojo-Alvarez, Oscar Barquero-Pérez, Francisco J Pastor-Pérez, Sergio Manzano-Fernández, Domingo A Pascual-Figal, Arcadi García-Alberola.
Abstract
Heart rate variability (HRV) markers have been widely used to characterize the autonomous regulation state of the heart from 24-h Holter monitoring, but long-term evolution of HRV indexes is mostly unknown. A dataset of 7-day Holter recordings of 22 patients with congestive heart failure was studied. A rhythmometric procedure was designed to characterize the infradian, circadian, and ultradian components for each patient, as well as circadian and ultradian fluctuations. Furthermore, a bootstrap test yielded automatically the rhythmometric model for each patient. We analyzed the temporal evolution of relevant time-domain (AVNN, SDNN, and NN50), frequency-domain (LF, HF, HFn, and LF/HF), and nonlinear (alpha(1) and SampEn) HRV indexes. Circadian components were the most significant for all HRV indexes, but the infradian ones were also strongly present in NN50, HFn, LF/HF, alpha(1), and SampEn indexes. Among ultradian components that one corresponding to 12 h, was the most relevant. Long-term monitoring of HRV conveys new potentially relevant rhythmometric information, which can be analyzed by using the proposed automatic procedure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20172786 DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2010.2040899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ISSN: 0018-9294 Impact factor: 4.538