Spontaneous and evoked K-complexes elicited a clear biphasic cardiac response during sleep, characterized by an initial acceleration in heart rate followed by a deceleration (P < 0.001).
Observational (n=40)
Does the occurrence of K-complexes (spontaneous or evoked) modulate heart rate fluctuations during sleep in healthy adolescents?
K-complexes during sleep are associated with a biphasic heart rate response that exhibits significant sex differences, suggesting a role in autonomic cardiovascular modulation.
p-value: p=<0.001
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To investigate the relationship between K-complexes (KCs) and cardiac functioning. METHODS: Forty healthy adolescents aged 16-22 y (19 females) participated in the study. Heart rate (HR) fluctuations associated with spontaneous and evoked KCs were investigated on two nights, one with (event-related potential night) and one without auditory tones presented across the night. RESULTS: There was a clear biphasic cardiac response to evoked and spontaneous KCs, with an initial acceleration in HR followed by a deceleration (P < 0.001). HR acceleration occurred immediately to KCs in response to tones presented in the first third of the interbeat interval, but was delayed a beat when the tone occurred later in the cardiac cycle (P < 0.05). Sex differences were also evident. Pretone baseline HR was higher, and the magnitude of the HR response was blunted and delayed, in female compared to male adolescents (P < 0.001). Also, pretone baseline HR was lower when a tone elicited a KC compared to when it did not (P < 0.001), suggesting that KCs are possibly more likely to be elicited by external stimuli in states of reduced cardiac activation. CONCLUSIONS: The strict dependency observed between KCs and cardiac control indicates a potential role of KCs in modulating the cardiovascular system during sleep. Sex differences in the KC-cardiac response indicate the sensitivity of this measure in capturing sex differences in cardiac regulatory physiology.
Zambotti et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Healthy adolescents (n=40). Auditory tones to evoke K-complexes vs. Spontaneous K-complexes / no tones was evaluated on Heart rate fluctuations associated with spontaneous and evoked K-complexes (p=<0.001). Spontaneous and evoked K-complexes elicited a clear biphasic cardiac response during sleep, characterized by an initial acceleration in heart rate followed by a deceleration (P < 0.001).