Abstract

Impairment of the autonomous nervous system in early stages of Chagas' disease is still a matter of debate, although multiple approaches (including heart rate response to orthostatism and the Valsalva maneuver, and spontaneous variability) have been used to ascertain its occurrence. The circadian profile of heart rate and its variability have not been investigated in patients with Chagas' disease. We analyzed the 24-hour heart rate by Holter recordings in 63 patients with and without ECG alterations, who had positive serological findings for Chagas' disease. These results were compared with those in 22 healthy subjects matched for sex and age. Mean 24-hour heart rate and its circadian amplitude were analyzed with Cusum analysis and nocturnal dip. In a subgroup of 45 subjects (30 with Chagas' disease and 15 healthy controls), heart rate instantaneous variability (24-hour pNN50 and r-MSSD) and circadian amplitude were also calculated by Cusum analysis. 24-hour and diurnal heart rates were lower in patients with Chagas' disease than in healthy subjects (P<.05). Circadian amplitude and dip were lower in patients, but these differences did not reach statistical significance. In the subgroup of 45 subjects, the reductions in instantaneous heart rate variability (pNN50 and r-MSSD) in Chagasic patients were small, and circadian amplitudes were preserved, when compared with healthy subjects. The lower heart rate in patients with Chagas' disease occurred only during diurnal activity, and instantaneous heart rate variability was preserved. These findings suggest an alteration in the sympathetic branch of the autonomous nervous system. The circadian heart rate profile, which has not been studied previously in patients with Chagas' disease, does not seem appreciably blunted in this stage of the disease.

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