Biophysical characterization of the underappreciated and important relationship between heart rate variability and heart rate

Oliver Monfredi, Alexey E. Lyashkov, Anne Berit Johnsen, Shin Inada, Heiko Schneider, Ruoxi Wang, Mahesh Nirmalan, Ulrik Wisloff, Victor A. Maltsev, Edward Lakatta, Henggui Zhang, Mark R. Boyett

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

137 Scopus citations

Abstract

Heart rate (HR) variability (HRV; beat-to-beat changes in the R-wave to R-wave interval) has attracted considerable attention during the past 30+ years (PubMed currently lists >17 000 publications). Clinically, a decrease in HRV is correlated to higher morbidity and mortality in diverse conditions, from heart disease to fetal distress. It is usually attributed to fuctuation in cardiac autonomic nerve activity. We calculated HRV parameters from a variety of cardiac preparations (including humans, living animals, Langendorff-perfused heart, and single sinoatrial nodal cell) in diverse species, combining this with data from previously published articles. We show that regardless of conditions, there is a universal exponential decay-like relationship between HRV and HR. Using 2 biophysical models, we develop a theory for this and confirm that HRV is primarily dependent on HR and cannot be used in any simple way to assess autonomic nerve activity to the heart. We suggest that the correlation between a change in HRV and altered morbidity and mortality is substantially attributable to the concurrent change in HR. This calls for re-evaluation of the findings from many articles that have not adjusted properly or at all for HR differences when comparing HRV in multiple circumstances.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1334-1343
Number of pages10
JournalHypertension
Volume64
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Ion channels
  • Physiology
  • Sinoatrial node

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Internal Medicine

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