| Literature DB >> 27567816 |
Walter Struhal1, Christoph Mahringer2,3, Heinz Lahrmann4, Christoph Mörtl5, Peter Buhl2, Mario Huemer3, Gerhard Ransmayr1.
Abstract
Recent data suggest autonomic dysfunction in patients suffering dementia. This study evaluated autonomic modulation in dementia patients with and without autonomic involvement, employing ECG spectral analysis in the time-frequency domain (wavelet transform) in supine resting and head-up tilt (HUT) position. Thirty-six patients were prospectively evaluated at the Department of Neurology and Psychiatry, General Hospital of the City of Linz, between 2009 and 2014. A standard cardiovascular autonomic test series (Ewing battery) was performed to screen for autonomic dysfunction. The Ewing battery diagnoses were used as reference standard and compared to the diagnostic results obtained by spectral analysis (time-frequency domain) of ECG recordings. Based on the Ewing battery results, 14 patients suffered autonomic dysfunction, while 22 did not. Time frequency domain was accessed by using the continuous wavelet transformation (CWT) with an analytical Morlet mother wavelet in supine resting and HUT position. Within each cohort the modification of spectral components from supine resting to HUT was analyzed reflecting the autonomic modulation. For patients without autonomic dysfunction, a significant increase of autonomic modulation was detected by wavelet transformed ECG recordings (8%, p < 0.05; low frequency content) during HUT compared to supine resting. There was no significant modulation between HUT and supine resting in patients suffering autonomic dysfunction. In dementia patients suffering autonomic dysfunction, CWT identified blunted autonomic regulation only by analysis of ECG recordings without the need to assess other biosignals or tests depending on the patient's cooperation. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether CWT is a suitable method to support the standard Ewing battery in demented patients.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; autonomic nervous system; continuous wavelet zzm321990transformation; frontotemporal dementia; spectral analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27567816 PMCID: PMC5366248 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-160084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig.1A resting ECG, its corresponding heart rate variability, and the heartbeat distribution histogram. In (a) and (b), the lower time course displays the 1 kHz sampled ECG signal which has been denoised and corrected for baseline shift. The second time course above it is the heart rate variability, the time between consecutive R-Peaks in ms. The heartbeat distribution of the whole ECG signal can be seen in (c) with the mean heartbeat frequency of (67.72±4.13) bpm and the mean heart rate variability of (889.29±53.5) ms.
Fig.2HRV wavelet scalograms (a,b) and the corresponding normalized units time courses (momentary activity of each branch of the autonomic system) (c,d) in a patient without autonomic dysfunction. a) Autonomc activity in resting state. Horizontal lines define the confined LF and HF bands indicating sympathetic and parasympathetic activity. The color visualizes the actual activity shown on the color bar. Scalograms of the same patient are equally color scaled. b) HUT ANS activity for the same patient without autonomic dysfunction. LFnu increases 13% from the resting to the HUT position. c) The momentary ANS activity in the resting position versus the momentary activity during HUT in (d), the estimated momentary activity increases by 15% from resting to HUT.
Age distribution and total number of cases separated for gender and type of dementia. Data is grouped by diagnosed autonomic dysfunction according to the Ewing batter protocol. Descriptive Data is denoted as mean±standard deviation (Median) and sample size n (Ewing battery). Ewing battery results are displayed for: Coefficient of variance (CV), Expiration-Inspiration ratio (EI), Valsalva phase IIb/IV ratio (VAL), and the TILT30/15 ratio for HUT. Descriptive analysis parameters for LFnu are calculated as percentage of total autonomic activity. The normalized LF activity (LFnu) is significantly increased by δ= +6.53% from supine resting to HUT
| Group | Group | |||
| Group size | 14 | 22 | ||
| Age (years)† | 76±6 | 65±9 | ||
| Gender | 8 female / 6 male | 17 female / 5 male | ||
| Dementia Diagnosis | 6 DAT / 8 bvFTD | 8 DAT/14 bvFTD | ||
| CV Mean±Std (Median) | 3.89±1.88 (3.53) [ | 3.73±1.46 (3.77) [ | ||
| El Mean±Std (Median))† | 1.12±0.08(1.14) [ | 1.28±0.22 (1.22)[ | ||
| VAL Mean±Std (Median))† | 1.12±0.14 (1.11) [ | 1.32±0.24 (1.30) [ | ||
| Phase llb normal / blocked | 5/5 | 17/3 | ||
| Phase IV normal /blocked | 5/6 | 17/3 | ||
| TILT30/15 Mean±Std (Median)‡ | 1.1±0.13 (1.09) [ | 1.16±0.10 (1.15) [ | ||
| LFnu _ Resting (%) Mean±std (Median) | 71.18±23.17(78.22) | 72.8±16.07 (78.21) | ||
| LFnu _ hut (%) Mean±Std (Median) | 76.84±21.22 (80.48) | 78.99±16.98 (84.75) | ||
| 2.26 | 6.53† | |||
| 0.395 | 0.036 | |||
†significantly different (p-value < 5%) Wilcoxon ranksum test. ‡significantly different (p-value < 14%) Wilcoxon ranksum test.
Fig.3HRV wavelet scalograms and normalized units time courses (similar to Fig. 2) of a patient with autonomic dysfunction. (a) and (b) are scalograms of a representative patient in resting position (a) and during HUT (b) with no significant increase from the resting to the HUT position. (c) and (d) are the corresponding time courses of momentary ANS activity.