4.5 Article

Cardio-ventilatory coupling in young healthy resting subjects

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 8, Pages 1248-1257

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01424.2010

Keywords

Shannon entropy; respiratory sinus arrhythmia; heart rate variability

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL-087377, HL-087340]
  2. Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Service of the VA Office of Research and Development [I01BX000873]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Friedman L, Dick TE, Jacono FJ, Loparo KA, Yeganeh A, Fishman M, Wilson CG, Strohl KP. Cardio-ventilatory coupling in young healthy resting subjects. J Appl Physiol 112: 1248-1257, 2012. First published January 19, 2012; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01424.2010.-In this work, cardio-ventilatory coupling (CVC) refers to the statistical relationship between the onset of either inspiration (I) or expiration (E) and the timing of heartbeats (R-waves) before and after these respiratory events. CVC was assessed in healthy, young (< 45 yr), resting, supine subjects (n = 19). Four intervals were analyzed: time from I-onset to both the prior R-wave (R-to-I) and the following R-wave (I-to-R), as well as time from E-onset to both the prior R-wave (R-to-E) and following R-wave (E-to-R). The degree of coupling was quantified in terms of transformed relative Shannon entropy (tRSE), and chi(2) tests based on histograms of interval times from 200 breaths. Subjects were studied twice, from 5 to 27 days apart, and the test-retest reliability of CVC measures was computed. Several factors pointed to the relative importance of the R-to-I interval compared with other intervals. Coupling was significantly stronger for the R-to-I interval, coupling reliability was largest for the R-to-I interval, and only tRSE for the R-to-I interval was correlated with height, weight, and body surface area. The high test-retest reliability for CVC in the R-to-I interval provides support for the hypothesis that CVC strength is a subject trait. Across subjects, a peak similar to 138 ms prior to I-onset was characteristic of CVC in the R-to-I interval, although individual subjects also had earlier peaks (longer R-to-I intervals). CVC for the R-to-I interval was unrelated to two separate measures of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), suggesting that these two forms of coupling (CVC and RSA) are independent.

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