Higher cardiorespiratory fitness in individuals with substance use disorder predicted greater vagal activity before, during, and after stress induced by the Cold Pressor Test.
Case-Control (n=30)
Does cardiorespiratory fitness attenuate impairments in cardiac autonomic regulation during stress in individuals with substance use disorder?
Cardiorespiratory fitness may help preserve vagal autonomic activity and attenuate stress-induced autonomic impairments in individuals with chronic substance use disorder.
While drug use has been shown to impair cardiac autonomic regulation, exercise might overcome some of the damage. Herein, we describe how individuals with substance use disorder (SUD) have their heart rate variability (HRV) and drug-related behaviors negatively affected in response to a stressor. However, we show how cardiorespiratory fitness may attenuate those impairments in autonomic control. Fifteen individuals with SUD were matched with 15 non-SUD individuals by age, weight, height, and fitness level, and had their HRV responses under stress induced by the Cold Pressor Test (CPT). The SUD group had lower mean of R-R intervals before and after the CPT when compared with the non-SUD group. In addition, in individuals with SUD, higher cardiorespiratory fitness level predicted greater vagal activity before, during, and after CPT. Moreover, for individuals with SUD, days of abstinence predicted greater mean of R-R intervals during recovery from the CPT. Finally, years of drug use negatively predicted mean of R-R intervals during recovery. Thus, our results suggest that chronic drug use impairs cardiac autonomic regulation at rest and after a physical stress. However, cardiorespiratory fitness might attenuate these impairments by increasing vagal autonomic activity.
Cabral et al. (Tue,) conducted a case-control in Substance use disorder (n=30). Cardiorespiratory fitness and Cold Pressor Test (CPT) vs. Non-SUD individuals was evaluated on Heart rate variability (mean of R-R intervals) before, during, and after CPT. Higher cardiorespiratory fitness in individuals with substance use disorder predicted greater vagal activity before, during, and after stress induced by the Cold Pressor Test.
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