How does breathing pattern modulate respiratory sinus arrhythmia amplitude in humans?
17 seated human subjects
Voluntarily controlled tidal volume and breathing frequency
Spontaneous quiet breathing
Relationship of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) amplitude to tidal volume and breathing frequencysurrogate
The relationship between respiratory sinus arrhythmia and breathing frequency can be characterized by a low-frequency intercept, corner frequency, and roll-off, which normalizes for tidal volume.
The relationship of respiratory sinus arrhythmia amplitude (RSA) to tidal volume and breathing frequency was quantified during voluntarily controlled tidal volume and breathing frequency and spontaneous quiet breathing. Seventeen seated subjects breathed via mouthpiece and nose-clip, maintaining constant tidal volumes at each of several breathing frequencies. Inspiratory breath hold was zero frequency. Log RSA was plotted vs. log frequency for each tidal volume. The large stable RSA for frequencies less than 6 cycles/min was called low-frequency intercept (LFI, 20 +/- 5 beats/min). Low-frequency intercept was inversely proportional to a subject's age only to 35 yr. At higher breathing frequencies above a characteristic corner frequency (fC, 7.2 +/- 1.5 cycles/min) RSA decreased with constant slope (roll-off; 21 +/- 3.4 dB/decade). The RSA-volume relationship was linear permitting normalization of RSA-frequency curves for tidal volume to yield one curve. Spontaneous breathing data points fell on this curve. Voluntarily coupling of heart rate to breathing frequency in integer ratios reduced breath-by-breath variability of RSA without changing mean RSA. In conclusion, low-frequency intercept, corner frequency, and roll-off characterize an individual's RSA-frequency relationship during both voluntarily controlled and spontaneous breathing.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jules Hirsch
B. Bishop
AJP Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Hirsch et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8d109f39dfae3cad17fe0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1981.241.4.h620