Abstract

We show that heart rate enabled wearable devices can be used to measure respiratory rate. Respiration modulates the heart rate creating excess power in the heart rate variability at a frequency equal to the respiratory rate, a phenomenon known as respiratory sinus arrhythmia. We isolate this component from the power spectral density of the heart beat interval time series, and show that the respiratory rate thus estimated is in good agreement with a validation dataset acquired from sleep studies (root mean squared error = 0.648 min−1, mean absolute error = 0.46 min−1, mean absolute percentage error = 3%). We use this respiratory rate algorithm to illuminate two potential applications (a) understanding the distribution of nocturnal respiratory rate as a function of age and sex, and (b) examining changes in longitudinal nocturnal respiratory rate due to a respiratory infection such as COVID-19. 90% of respiratory rate values for healthy adults fall within the range 11.8−19.2 min−1 with a mean value of 15.4 min−1. Respiratory rate is shown to increase with nocturnal heart rate. It also varies with BMI, reaching a minimum at 25 kg/m2, and increasing for lower and higher BMI. The respiratory rate decreases slightly with age and is higher in females compared to males for age <50 years, with no difference between females and males thereafter. The 90% range for the coefficient of variation in a 14 day period for females (males) varies from 2.3–9.2% (2.3−9.5%) for ages 20−24 yr, to 2.5−16.8% (2.7−21.7%) for ages 65−69 yr. We show that respiratory rate is often elevated in subjects diagnosed with COVID-19. In a 7 day window from D−1 to D+5 (where D0 is the date when symptoms first present, for symptomatic individuals, and the test date for asymptomatic cases), we find that 36.4% (23.7%) of symptomatic (asymptomatic) individuals had at least one measurement of respiratory rate 3 min−1 higher than the regular rate.

Highlights

  • It is well known that heart rate varies with respiration, increasing during inhalation, and decreasing during exhalation

  • It is known that different stages of sleep are likely to have varying magnitudes of respiratory sinus arrhythmia[31]

  • The sinus arrhythmia component is contained within the high frequency (HF) band for respiratory rate values > 9 min−1

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Summary

Introduction

It is well known that heart rate varies with respiration, increasing during inhalation, and decreasing during exhalation. In a study of patients admitted to the hospital with pneumonia from 2010 to 2012, it was shown that those with a respiratory rate in excess of 27 min−1 had an odds ratio of 1.72 for in-hospital death[7]. The respiratory rate has been shown to be a useful biomarker for COVID-19 detection[14,15]. Despite these findings, the respiratory rate is not always recorded while monitoring patients, and may be considered a neglected vital sign[6,16,17]

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