Evolution in functional complexity of heart rate dynamics: a measure of cardiac allograft adaptability
Cardiothoracic Surgery and Medicine, Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102 The capacity of self-organized systems to adapt is embodied in the functional organization of intrinsic control mechanisms. Evolution in functional complexity of heart rate variability...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology integrative and comparative physiology, 1998-09, Vol.275 (3), p.720-R727 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cardiothoracic Surgery and Medicine, Allegheny University of the
Health Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102
The capacity
of self-organized systems to adapt is embodied in the functional
organization of intrinsic control mechanisms. Evolution in functional
complexity of heart rate variability (HRV) was used as measure of the
capacity of the transplanted heart to express newly emergent regulatory
order. In a cross-sectional study of 100 patients after
(0-10 yr) heart transplantation (HTX), heart rate dynamics were
assessed using pointwise correlation dimension (PD2) analysis. A new
observation is that, commencing with the acute event of allograft
transplantation, the dynamics of rhythm formation proceed through
complex phase transitions. At implantation, the donor heart manifested
metronome-like chronotropic behavior (PD2 ~1.0). At 11-100 days,
dimensional complexity of HRV reached a peak (PD2 ~2.0) associated
with resurgence in the high-frequency component (0.15-0.5 Hz) of
the power spectral density. Subsequent dimensional loss to PD2 ~1.0
at 20-30 mo after HTX was followed by a progressive near-linear
gain in system complexity, reaching PD2 ~3.0 7-10 yr after HTX.
The "dynamic reorganization" in the allograft rhythm-generating
system, seen in the first 100 days, is a manifestation of the adaptive
capacity of intrinsic control mechanisms. The loss of HRV 2 yr after
HTX implies a withdrawal of intrinsic autonomic control and/or
development of an entrained dynamic pattern characteristic of extrinsic
sympathetic input. The subsequent long-term progressive rise in
dimensional complexity of HRV can be attributed to the restoration of a
functional order patterning parasympathetic control. The recognition
that the decentralized heart can restitute the multidimensional state
space of HR generator dynamics independent of external autonomic
signaling may provide a new perspective on principles that constitute
homeodynamic regulation.
nonlinear dynamics; heart rate variability; cardiac adaptation; self-organizing systems; homeodynamic regulation |
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ISSN: | 0363-6119 0002-9513 1522-1490 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpregu.1998.275.3.r720 |