Normalized pulse volume derived from the bottom of the ear-canal significantly decreased during cold water immersion and correlated with index finger measurements, validating it as a measure of sympathetic activity.
Observational (n=16)
No
Absolute Event Rate: -8.27% vs -8.01%
p-value: p=<0.001
Normalized pulse volume (NPV) derived from the ear has the potential to be a practical index for monitoring daily life stress. However, ear NPV has not yet been validated. Therefore, we compared NPV derived from an index finger using transmission photoplethysmography as a reference, with NPV derived from a middle finger and four sites of the ear using reflection photoplethysmography during baseline and while performing cold and warm water immersion in ten young and six middle-aged subjects. The results showed that logarithmically-transformed NPV (lnNPV) during cold water immersion as compared with baseline values was significantly lower, only at the index finger, the middle finger and the bottom of the ear-canal. Furthermore, lnNPV reactivities (ΔlnNPV; the difference between baseline and test values) from an index finger were significantly related to ΔlnNPV from the middle finger and the bottom of the ear-canal (young: r = 0.90 and 0.62, middle-aged: r = 0.80 and 0.58, respectively). In conclusion, these findings show that reflection and transmission photoplethysmography are comparable methods to derive NPV in accordance with our theoretical prediction. NPV derived from the bottom of the ear-canal is a valid approach, which could be useful for evaluating daily life stress.
Lee et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Healthy volunteers (n=16). Cold pressor test (CPT) and warm water immersion (WWI) vs. Baseline resting state was evaluated on Normalized pulse volume (lnNPV) at the bottom of the ear-canal during cold pressor test in young subjects (p=<0.001). Normalized pulse volume derived from the bottom of the ear-canal significantly decreased during cold water immersion and correlated with index finger measurements, validating it as a measure of sympathetic activity.
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