Abstract

Heart rate variability (HRV) provides important information about cardiac autonomic modulation. Since it is a noninvasive and inexpensive method, HRV has been used to evaluate several parameters of cardiovascular health. However, the internal reproducibility of this method has been challenged in some studies. Our aim was to determine the intra-individual reproducibility of HRV parameters in short-term recordings obtained in supine and orthostatic positions. Electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings were obtained from 30 healthy subjects (20-49 years, 14 men) using a digital apparatus (sampling ratio = 250 Hz). ECG was recorded for 10 min in the supine position and for 10 min in the orthostatic position. The procedure was repeated 2-3 h later. Time and frequency domain analyses were performed. Frequency domain included low (LF, 0.04-0.15 Hz) and high frequency (HF, 0.15-0.4 Hz) bands. Power spectral analysis was performed by the autoregressive method and model order was set at 16. Intra-subject agreement was assessed by linear regression analysis, test of difference in variances and limits of agreement. Most HRV measures (pNN50, RMSSD, LF, HF, and LF/HF ratio) were reproducible independent of body position. Better correlation indexes (r > 0.6) were obtained in the orthostatic position. Bland-Altman plots revealed that most values were inside the agreement limits, indicating concordance between measures. Only SDNN and NNv in the supine position were not reproducible. Our results showed reproducibility of HRV parameters when recorded in the same individual with a short time between two exams. The increased sympathetic activity occurring in the orthostatic position probably facilitates reproducibility of the HRV indexes.

Highlights

  • Heart rate variability (HRV) is a noninvasive tool used to assess autonomic modulation of cardiac activity and either temporal or spectral measures have been used to evaluate several parameters of cardiovascular health [1]

  • It is noteworthy that HRV parameters showed large differences when supine and orthostatic positions were compared

  • Intra-individual reproducibility of spectral parameters obtained in short-time recordings, is still scarce and its results heterogeneous [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Heart rate variability (HRV) is a noninvasive tool used to assess autonomic modulation of cardiac activity and either temporal or spectral measures have been used to evaluate several parameters of cardiovascular health [1]. Changes of neural heart modulation occur in several systemic diseases, such as diabetes [2,3,4,5], hypertension [6], heart failure [7,8], and coronary heart disease [9,10]. In such situations, HRV analysis can be used to monitor long-term changes of cardiac regulation by the autonomic nervous system. Reproducibility of the different components of spectral HRV obtained from short-term records is still under discussion [24,25]

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