Publication Abstract Display
Type: Published Manuscript
Title: Deriving heart period variability from blood pressure waveforms.
Authors: McKinley PS, Shapiro PA, Bagiella E, Myers MM, de Meersman RE, Grant I, Sloan RP
Year: 2003
Publication: Journal of Applied Physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
Volume: 95 Issue: 4 Pages: 1431-8
Abstract:International standards for calculating heart period variability (HPV) from a series of R-wave intervals (R-R) in an electrocardiographic (ECG) recording have been widely accepted. It is possible, and potentially useful in various settings, to use systolic blood pressure waveform intervals to estimate HPV, but the validity of HPV derived from blood pressure (BP) waveforms has not been established. To test the reliability between BP- and ECG-derived HPV indexes, we evaluated data from 234 healthy adults in four studies of HPV reactivity to stress. Study conditions included resting baseline, arithmetic, Stroop test, speech presentation, and orthostatic tilt. Continuous ECG and BP recordings were sampled at a rate of 500 Hz, scored by the same methods, and used to calculate heart rate and time- and frequency-domain measures of HPV. Overall, reliability between the two methods was very high for computing heart rate and HPV indexes. High-frequency HPV indexes were somewhat less reliably computed. In conclusion, in healthy adults, with the use of appropriate methods, BP waveforms can produce reliable indexes of HPV

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