Literature DB >> 22164811

Relationship between dysfunctional breathing patterns and ability to achieve target heart rate variability with features of "coherence" during biofeedback.

Rosalba Courtney1, Marc Cohen, Jan van Dixhoorn.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heart rate variability (HRV) biofeedback is a self-regulation strategy used to improve conditions including asthma, stress, hypertension, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Respiratory muscle function affects hemodynamic influences on respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), and HRV and HRV-biofeedback protocols often include slow abdominal breathing to achieve physiologically optimal patterns of HRV with power spectral distribution concentrated around the 0.1-Hz frequency and large amplitude. It is likely that optimal balanced breathing patterns and ability to entrain heart rhythms to breathing reflect physiological efficiency and resilience and that individuals with dysfunctional breathing patterns may have difficulty voluntarily modulating HRV and RSA. The relationship between breathing movement patterns and HRV, however, has not been investigated. This study examines how individuals' habitual breathing patterns correspond with their ability to optimize HRV and RSA.
METHOD: Breathing pattern was assessed using the Manual Assessment of Respiratory Motion (MARM) and the Hi Lo manual palpation techniques in 83 people with possible dysfunctional breathing before they attempted HRV biofeedback. Mean respiratory rate was also assessed. Subsequently, participants applied a brief 5-minute biofeedback protocol, involving breathing and positive emotional focus, to achieve HRV patterns proposed to reflect physiological "coherence" and entrainment of heart rhythm oscillations to other oscillating body systems.
RESULTS: Thoracic-dominant breathing was associated with decreased coherence of HRV (r = -.463, P = .0001). Individuals with paradoxical breathing had the lowest HRV coherence (t(8) = 10.7, P = .001), and the negative relationship between coherence of HRV and extent of thoracic breathing was strongest in this group (r = -.768, P = .03).
CONCLUSION: Dysfunctional breathing patterns are associated with decreased ability to achieve HRV patterns that reflect cardiorespiratory efficiency and autonomic nervous system balance. This suggests that dysfunctional breathing patterns are not only biomechanically inefficient but also reflect decreased physiological resilience. Breathing assessment using simple manual techniques such as the MARM and Hi Lo may be useful in HRV biofeedback to identify if poor responders require more emphasis on correction of dysfunctional breathing.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22164811

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Altern Ther Health Med        ISSN: 1078-6791            Impact factor:   1.305


  4 in total

1.  Inclusion of a rest period in diaphragmatic breathing increases high frequency heart rate variability: Implications for behavioral therapy.

Authors:  Matthew E B Russell; April B Scott; Ian A Boggero; Charles R Carlson
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 4.016

2.  DEVELOPMENT OF A SCREENING PROTOCOL TO IDENTIFY INDIVIDUALS WITH DYSFUNCTIONAL BREATHING.

Authors:  Kyle Kiesel; Tonya Rhodes; Jacob Mueller; Alyssa Waninger; Robert Butler
Journal:  Int J Sports Phys Ther       Date:  2017-10

3.  A CLINICAL GUIDE TO THE ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT OF BREATHING PATTERN DISORDERS IN THE PHYSICALLY ACTIVE: PART 1.

Authors:  Erin B Chapman; Jena Hansen-Honeycutt; Alan Nasypany; Russell T Baker; Jim May
Journal:  Int J Sports Phys Ther       Date:  2016-10

4.  Reliability and Validity of the Iranian Version of Nijmegen Questionnaire in Iranians with Asthma.

Authors:  Majid Ravanbakhsh; Moslem Nargesi; Hanieh Raji; Maryam Haddadzadeh Shoushtari
Journal:  Tanaffos       Date:  2015
  4 in total

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