| Literature DB >> 29476045 |
Francesco Sessa1, Valenzano Anna1, Giovanni Messina1, Giuseppe Cibelli1, Vincenzo Monda2, Gabriella Marsala3, Maria Ruberto4, Antonio Biondi5, Orazio Cascio6, Giuseppe Bertozzi1, Daniela Pisanelli1, Francesca Maglietta1, Antonietta Messina2, Maria P Mollica2, Monica Salerno1.
Abstract
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) represents about 25% of deaths in clinical cardiology. The identification of risk factors for SCD is the philosopher's stone of cardiology and the identification of non-invasive markers of risk of SCD remains one of the most important goals for the scientific community.The aim of this review is to analyze the state of the art around the heart rate variability (HRV) as a predictor factor for SCD.HRV is probably the most analyzed index in cardiovascular risk stratification technical literature, therefore an important number of models and methods have been developed.Nowadays, low HRV has been shown to be independently predictive of increased mortality in post- myocardial infarction patients, heart failure patients, in contrast with the data of the general population.Contrariwise, the relationship between HRV and SCD has received scarce attention in low-risk cohorts. Furthermore, in general population the attributable risk is modest and the cost/benefit ratio is not always convenient.The HRV evaluation could become an important tool for health status in risks population, even though the use of HRV alone for risk stratification of SCD is limited and further studies are needed.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular diseases; heart; heart rate; heart rate variability; sudden cardiac death
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29476045 PMCID: PMC5842851 DOI: 10.18632/aging.101386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682
SCD rate estimated per 100000 person-years: the risk of SCD is higher in men than in women [7].
| 6.68 | 1,46 |
Parameters utilized for HRV analysis [49].
| Power spectral density (PSD) | Very Low Frequency (VLF) | Very Low Frequency (VLF) | |
| PSD parametric | Low Frequency (LF) | Low Frequency (LF) | |
| PSD non parametric | High Frequency (HF) | High Frequency (HF) | |
Figure 1Principal diseases related to HRV.