Abstract

The present study focuses on the evaluation of autonomic nervous function, which is increasingly being used as an objective measure of fatigue state. It has recently been reported that autonomic nervous activity, which is expressed as total heart rate variability (HRV) power, is associated with, and can be used as an objective measure of, mental and physical fatigue. Total HRV power (log (LF + HF)) has been shown to decline with ageing, and thus cannot be utilized as a fatigue index in populations with a different age composition. In the present study, we devised standard scores (deviation value) for autonomic nervous activity corrected for individual age calculated from the distribution of such activity in individual age cohorts. This allowed us to accurately evaluate an individual's autonomic nervous activity, even when that individual was part of a group with members of different ages. Standard scores were quantified using autonomic nervous function data gathered from 1,969 healthy individuals (age range 20–77 years).The efficacy of this method in mental health screening was investigated by evaluating both autonomic nervous function and subjective levels of fatigue among corporate workers. Based on results from the Brief Job Stress Questionnaire recommended by the research team of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, 103 participants were divided into two groups (a high-stress group [n = 17] and a non–high-stress group [n = 86]). Visual analog scale (VAS) scores for all fatigue-related symptoms were significantly higher among the high-stress than among the non–high-stress group (p < 0.01).The mean standard score for autonomic nervous activity was 56.3 for the non–high-stress group. The score for the high-stress group was significantly lower, at 47.9 (p < 0.01), indicating that autonomic nervous function was reduced among participants who experienced high stress. According to an analysis of raw and standard scores in each domain, autonomic nervous activity did not significantly correlate with stress-causing factors (e.g., overwork) or other factors affecting stress responses (e.g., support from supervisors and colleagues), but did exhibit a significant positive correlation with physical and mental responses to stress (r = 0.334, p < 0.01). Lower raw scores for mental and physical responses to stress represent stronger subjective symptoms. Moreover, greater stress responses were found to be associated with lower standard scores for autonomic nervous activity.In terms of fatigue-related symptoms rated using the VAS, autonomic nervous activity negatively correlated with mental stress, physical stress, fatigue/malaise, depressed mood, anxiety/fear, tension, irritation/anger, cognitive decline, and muscle/joint/general pain, and positively correlated with motivation/vitality. Reduced autonomic nervous activity was observed with high stress, confirming that standard scores for autonomic nervous activity are associated with mental and physical responses to stress and subjective fatigue-related symptoms.These results indicate that the evaluation of autonomic nervous activity using standard scores (deviation value) is a useful tool for the objective measurement of fatigue state, even in groups with members of different ages, and can be applied as a useful objective health index to evaluate industrial fatigue.

Highlights

  • In recent years, Japan has seen an upward trend in the number of employees who have received approval for workers’ compensation after developing psychiatric disorders owing to job stress

  • When we studied autonomic nervous activity as expressed by total heart rate variability (HRV) power (log (LF þ HF)) in 428 healthy persons, it was found to be associated with age, and because it has been observed to decline with ageing [11], it cannot be used as a fatigue index in populations with a different age composition

  • Data from 103 employees (52 men, 51 women; mean age, 39.1 Æ 9.2 years) working in these offices were obtained through autonomic measurement based on analysis of HRV, measurement of fatigue-related symptoms with 10 items rated on a visual analog scale (VAS), and results from the Brief Job Stress Questionnaire (BJSQ) (57 questions) recommended by an MHLW research team

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Summary

Introduction

Japan has seen an upward trend in the number of employees who have received approval for workers’ compensation after developing psychiatric disorders owing to job stress. Segerstrom et al [5] reported that higher resting HRV has been associated with a number of potential indicators of self-regulatory capacity, fewer negative emotions during daily stress, more effective stress coping, and better impulse control They suggested that self-regulatory tasks are associated with activation of the prefrontal cortex, and that self-regulatory fatigue selectively and adversely affects performance on cognitive tasks that are considered to be frontal or executive. When we assessed autonomic function in a mental fatigue model of healthy volunteers caused by long-term computerized Kraepelin test workload, the low/high frequency component ratio (LF/HF) was significantly increased by the fatigue-inducing task and decreased by resting, suggesting that mental stress causes a relatively sympathetic nerve activity-dominant state [9]. When we studied autonomic nervous activity as expressed by total HRV power (log (LF þ HF)) in 428 healthy persons, it was found to be associated with age, and because it has been observed to decline with ageing [11], it cannot be used as a fatigue index in populations with a different age composition

Materials & methods
Autonomic mesurement based on analysis of HRV
Measurement of fatigue-related symptoms with 10 items on a VAS
Statistical analysis
Ethical treatment
Results
Relationship between stress and fatigue-related symptoms rated using a VAS
Relationship between stress and autonomic nervous function
Discussion
Full Text
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