Abnormal heart rate variability is associated with an increased risk of mortality, though the exact pathophysiological mechanisms and best measurement methods remain unclear.
Does abnormal heart rate variability predict mortality in subjects with and without structural heart disease?
Subjects with and without structural heart disease
Measurement of heart rate variability (traditional time and frequency domain measures, and new analysis methods based on nonlinear dynamics)
Risk of subsequent death (including arrhythmic death, vascular causes of death, progression of coronary atherosclerosis, and death due to heart failure)
Although abnormal heart rate variability is associated with increased mortality risk, its application in clinical practice requires further understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms and standardization of measurement techniques.
The objectives of this review are to discuss the diversity of mechanisms that may explain the association between heart rate (HR) variability and mortality, to appraise the clinical applicability of traditional and new measures of HR variability and to propose future directions in this field of research. There is a large body of data demonstrating that abnormal HR variability measured over a 24-h period provides information on the risk of subsequent death in subjects with and without structural heart disease. However, the mechanisms responsible for this association are not completely established. Therefore, no specific therapy is currently available to improve the prognosis for patients with abnormal HR variability. Reduced HR variability has been most commonly associated with a risk of arrhythmic death, but recent data suggest that abnormal variability also predicts vascular causes of death, progression of coronary atherosclerosis and death due to heart failure. A consensus is also lacking on the best HR variability measure for clinical purposes. Time and frequency domain measures of HR variability have been most commonly used, but recent studies show that new analysis methods based on nonlinear dynamics may be more powerful in terms of risk stratification. Before the measurement of HR variability can be applied to clinical practice and used to direct therapy, more precise insight into the pathophysiological link between HR variability and mortality are needed. Further studies should also address the issue of which of the HR variability indexes, including the new nonlinear measures, is best for clinical purposes in various patient populations.
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Huikuri et al. (Wed,) conducted a review in Structural heart disease. Abnormal heart rate variability was evaluated on Mortality. Abnormal heart rate variability is associated with an increased risk of mortality, though the exact pathophysiological mechanisms and best measurement methods remain unclear.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a233d500a0217805fbbe4e8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(99)00468-4
Heikki V. Huikuri
Electrophysiology
Timo Mäkikallio
Electrophysiology
Juhani Airaksinen
General Cardiology
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
University of Miami
University of Oulu
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