Association between obesity and heart rate variability indices: an intuition toward cardiac autonomic alteration - a risk of CVD

Obese people have a higher prevalence of cardiovascular disease, which is supposed to be due to autonomic dysfunction and/or metabolic disorder. The alterations in cardiac autonomic functions bring out the changes in the heart rate variability (HRV) indicators, an assessing tool for cardiac autonomi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetes, metabolic syndrome and obesity metabolic syndrome and obesity, 2017-01, Vol.10, p.57-64
Hauptverfasser: Yadav, Ram Lochan, Yadav, Prakash Kumar, Yadav, Laxmi Kumari, Agrawal, Kopila, Sah, Santosh Kumar, Islam, Md Nazrul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Obese people have a higher prevalence of cardiovascular disease, which is supposed to be due to autonomic dysfunction and/or metabolic disorder. The alterations in cardiac autonomic functions bring out the changes in the heart rate variability (HRV) indicators, an assessing tool for cardiac autonomic conditions. To compare the cardiac autonomic activity between obese and normal weight adults and find out the highest association between the indices of HRV and obesity. The study was conducted in 30 adult obese persons (body mass index [BMI] >30 kg/m ) and 29 healthy normal weight controls (BMI 18-24 kg/m ). Short-term HRV variables were assessed using standard protocol. Data were compared between groups using Mann-Whitney test. Obesity indices such as waist circumference, hip circumference, waist-hip ratio (WHR), and BMI were measured and calculated, and they were correlated with HRV indices using Spearman's correlation analysis. In the obese group, there was a significant increase in the mean heart rate, whereas the HRV parasympathetic indicators were less (eg, root mean square of differences of successive RR intervals [28.75 {16.72-38.35} vs 41.55 {30.6-56.75} ms, =0.018], number of RR intervals that differ by >50 ms, that is, NN50 [15.5 {2-39} vs 83.5 {32.75-116.25}, =0.010], etc) and the sympathetic indicator low frequency (LF)/high frequency (HF) ratio (1.2 [0.65-2.20] vs 0.79 [0.5-1.02], =0.045) was more than that of the normal weight group. Spearman's correlation between HRV and obesity indices showed significant positive correlation of WHR with LF in normalized unit ( =0.478,
ISSN:1178-7007
1178-7007
DOI:10.2147/DMSO.S123935