Abstract
Early and noninvasive identification of heart failure progression is an important adjunct to successful and timely intervention. Severity of heart failure (HF) was assessed by Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF). In this paper, we explore the circadian (24-hour) heart rate variability (HRV) features from ''normal" (EF >50%), "at-risk" (EF <40%), and "border-line" (40% ≤ EF ≤ 50%) patient data to determine whether HRV features can predict the stage of heart failure. All coronary artery disease (CAD) 24-hour circadian heart rate data were fitted by a cosinor analysis algorithm. Hourly HRV features from time- and frequency-domains were then extracted from all 24-hour patient data. A one-way ANOVA test was performed followed by a Tukey post-hoc multiple comparison test to investigate the differences among the three groups. The results showed a statistically significant difference between the three groups when using the normalized high frequency (HF Norm), low frequency peak (LF Peak), and the normalized very-low frequency (VLF Norm) for the 05:00-06:00 and 18:00-19:00 time periods. These results highlight a possible link between the circadian variation of sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system activity and LVEF for CAD patients. The results could be useful in differentiating the various degrees of LVEF by using only noninvasive HRV features derived over a 24-hour period.Clinical relevance- The proposed method could be clinically useful to estimate the extent of LVEF associated with the severity of heart failure by recording the circadian variation of the heart rate in CAD patients. However, further clinical trials on a larger cohort of patients and controls are required.
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