Heart Rate Variability in Inappropriate Sinus.
10.4070/kcj.2000.30.9.1133
- Author:
Chon Sook LEE
;
Woo Hyung BAE
;
Hyeon Gook LEE
;
Sang Hyun KIM
;
Jae Kyung HA
;
Seong Ho KIM
;
Byung Jae AHN
;
Kook Jin CHUN
;
Taek Jong HONG
;
Yung Woo SHIN
- Publication Type:Original Article
- MeSH:
Autonomic Nervous System;
Echocardiography;
Electrocardiography, Ambulatory;
Heart Diseases;
Heart Rate*;
Heart*;
Humans;
Motor Activity;
Tachycardia, Sinus
- From:Korean Circulation Journal
2000;30(9):1133-1138
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Inappropriate sinus tachycardia(IST) manifests chronic nonparoxysmal sinus tachycardia in healthy individuals and is characterized by consistently elevated heart rate and exaggerated responses to minimal physical activity. Heart rate variability(HRV) using 24-hour Holter monitoring represents one of the methods of evaluating the harmony of autonomic nervous system activity. So, authors investigate the autonomic nervous system activity by the HRV in patients with IST. METHODS: We compared the pattern of cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic activity through the time domain analysis of heart rate variability with 24-hour Holter monitoring between 23 patients with IST and 23 healthy control subjects. None of the patients had organic heart disease as determined by routine laboratory examination and echocardiography. And then, time domain measures(mean NN, SDNN, SDANN, SD, rMSSD, pNN50) were analyzed. RESULTS: The mean age of patients and control were 38+/-10 and 37 9 years, respectively(p=S). The mean clinical heart rate of patients and control was 104 5/min and 72+/-5/min, respectively(p<0.05). Among the time domain indices, mean of all normal RR intervals(mean NN), standard deviation of all normal RR intervals(SDNN), standard deviation of mean RR interval(SDANN), mean of standard deviations of all normal RR intervals(SD), root mean square successive differences between adjacent normal RR intervals(rMSSD), and percent of difference between adjacent normal RR intervals(pNN50) in the patient group were significantly shorter compared to control group(p<0.01). CONCLUSION: In IST, cardiac vagal influence on the heart rate is blunted.