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1.
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-217559

ABSTRACT

Background: Respiration is an important contributor to heart rate variability (HRV). It has been well established that decreasing the breathing frequency increases the HRV and the HRV is maximum at a breathing frequency of 0.1 Hz (6 breaths/min). Many studies have investigated the changes in HRV parameters during 0.1 Hz breathing, but only a few studies have explored the persisting effects, if any, of 0.1 Hz breathing after spontaneous breathing is resumed. Aim and Objectives: The aim of this study was to study the immediate effect of 5 min of controlled deep breathing at 0.1 Hz frequency, on short-term HRV. Materials and Methods: Twelve healthy volunteers were made to perform deep slow breathing at the rate of 6 breaths per minute following recorded prompts, for 5 min. Their baseline 5-min short-term HRV parameters before the controlled breathing were compared with the short-term HRV parameters of three 5-min segments of ECG recorded successively after the resumption of spontaneous breathing using repeated measures ANOVA. Results: There was no significant difference in the short-term HRV parameters measured before and after the 5 min of deep breathing. Conclusion: Controlled breathing at 0.1 Hz frequency for 5 min does not produce a significant immediate change in the short-term HRV of healthy individuals.

2.
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-217557

ABSTRACT

Background: Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis is an important tool to assess the cardiac autonomic regulation in health and disease. Time-domain and frequency-domain analyses are linear methods that are traditionally used for HRV analysis. Application of non-linear methods in HRV analysis has been shown to provide additional information and has been found to be useful in predicting complications and mortality in cardiovascular disease conditions. HRV analysis during deep breathing is commonly used to assess the integrity and extent of the parasympathetic control of the heart. Aim and Objectives: This study aims to analyze the HRV during deep breathing at 0.1 Hz frequency, 6 breaths/minute using non-linear methods and to see whether they correlate with the time-domain measures of HRV. Materials and Methods: Twelve healthy volunteers performed deep slow breathing at 0.1 Hz frequency for 5 min following recorded prompts. In the time domain, mean heart rate (MHR), SDNN, RMSSD, and pNN50 during baseline and deep breathing were measured. In the non-linear domain, approximate entropy (AppEn), sample entropy (SampEn), and detrended fluctuation analysis DFA (?1) were calculated. The quantitative measures of the Poincare plot, namely, SD1, SD2, and SD2/SD1, which are known to provide linear information, were also estimated. Wilcoxon’s signed-rank test was used to compare the baseline parameters with those of deep breathing. Spearman’s correlation was used to assess the correlation between the parameters obtained from the different methods. Results: There was no significant change in the MHR, RMSSD, pNN50, and SD1 during 0.1 Hz deep breathing while SDNN, SD2, SD2/SD1, and DFA?1 showed a significant increase. Furthermore, 0.1 Hz breathing decreased the AppEn and SampEn measures of HRV. There was a strong correlation among SDNN, RMSSD, pNN50, SD1, SD2, SD2/SD1, and DFA?1, but there was no correlation between any of the above measures and the non-linear measures AppEn and SampEn. Conclusion: While the non-linear measure DFA?1 correlates well with time domain measures of HRV and the quantitative measures of the Poincare plot during 0.1 Hz breathing, AppEn and SampEn do not show such correlation. Instead, they decrease significantly when breathing is voluntarily controlled at 6 breaths/min.

3.
Salud ment ; 34(4): 291-299, Jul.-Aug. 2011. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: lil-632842

ABSTRACT

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is a common psychiatric disorder that represents one of the main public health problems worldwide. It has been projected that for 2020 it will be the second cause of disability-adjusted life years just below ischemic heart disease. Quantitative electroencephalogram provides the opportunity to study cortical oscillatory activity across the different frequency bands. It constitutes an accessible tool to explore the clinical and neurophysiologic correlates underlying psychiatric disorders as well as the effect of diverse therapeutic options and the performance through cognitive tasks. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation is a technique that allows the stimulation of the cerebral cortex noninvasively, relatively painlessly and with fairly few side effects. The vast majority of rTMS studies target left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) based on imaging studies showing that left prefrontal cortex dysfunction is pathophysiologically linked to depression. However, there is some evidence implicating right PFC in the pathophysiology of depression. Comparison of antidepressant efficacy of diverse stimulation frequencies is relevant since a main concern around rTMS is its potential to induce seizures; hence we consider that frequency of stimulation is an important aspect to be studied. For this study we aimed to elucidate the clinical efficacy of rTMS comparing two groups of depressed patients stimulated over DLPFC, one over the left (at 5 Hz) and other over the right (at 1 Hz). We also meant to know if there were clinical and electroencephalographic differential long-term after-effects between those groups of treatment. We included twenty right-handed patients with a DSM-IVR diagnosis of MDD. They were assigned into two groups of treatment. Group 1 received 5Hz rTMS over the left DLPFC. Group 2 received 1Hz rTMS over the right DLPFC. We obtained two EEG measurements in order to analyze Z score of broad-band spectral parameters and cross-spectral. No statistical differences among groups were found in response to treatment after weekly comparisons of clinimetric scores and significant differences between baseline and final assessment by HDRS, MADRS, BDI and HARS. The major rTMS effect on EEG was observed in the group that received 1 Hz over the right DLPFC and no significant effects were observed for the group that received 5 Hz over the left DLPFC. Our results propose that administration of 15 sessions on either left (5 Hz) or right (1 Hz) rTMS over DLPFC is sufficient to reach response to treatment, assessed by HDRS, MADRS, BDI and HARS in subjects with MDD. Moreover, in both cases rTMS was able to induce an equivalent antidepressant effect. The major effect of rTMS on EEG was observed in the right 1 Hz rTMS group where changes were elicited mainly over frontal, central and temporal regions on alpha and particularly beta frequency bands. In a lesser extent for left 5 Hz rTMS group the main effect was observed on anterior regions for beta and particularly alpha frequency bands. We believe it is pertinent to continue exploring the therapeutic potential of lower stimulation frequencies, for what further research including larger samples is still necessary to confirm these trends.


El trastorno depresivo mayor es una entidad psiquiátrica que representa uno de los principales problemas de salud pública a nivel mundial. Se ha proyectado que para el año 2020 será la segunda causa de discapacidad únicamente por debajo de la cardiopatía isquémica. La utilización del electroencefalograma cuantitativo ofrece la oportunidad de estudiar la actividad oscilatoria cortical a través de las diferentes bandas de frecuencias. Éste constituye una herramienta para explorar las características clínicas y neurofisiológicas que subyacen a los trastornos psiquiátricos, así como un instrumento para evaluar el efecto de diversas opciones terapéuticas y el desempeño de los sujetos durante la realización de tareas cognitivas. La estimulación magnética transcraneal repetitiva (EMTr) es una técnica que permite la estimulación de la corteza cerebral de manera no invasiva, relativamente sin dolor y con pocos efectos secundarios. Con base en los estudios de neuroimagen que vinculan la fisiopatología de la depresión con disfunción en la corteza prefrontal dorsolateral (CPFDL), la mayoría de las investigaciones se han enfocado en estimular dicha corteza en el hemisferio izquierdo. No obstante, existen pruebas que implican a la corteza prefrontal derecha con la fisiopatología de la depresión. La relevancia de comparar la eficacia antidepresiva de diversas frecuencias radica en el hecho de que un tema de interés particular alrededor de la EMTr es su potencial para inducir convulsiones, por ello consideramos que la exploración de las diversas frecuencias de estimulación con efecto terapéutico constituye un aspecto importante de estudio. Para este trabajo nos propusimos determinar la eficacia antidepresiva de la EMTr comparando dos grupos de pacientes que fueron estimulados en la CPFDL derecha a 1 Hz o en la izquierda a 5 Hz. También buscamos dilucidar si existen diferencias clínicas y electroencefalográficas a largo plazo entre grupos de tratamiento. Para este estudio se incluyeron 20 pacientes con diagnóstico de trastorno depresivo mayor de acuerdo con los criterios del DSM-I V. Los sujetos fueron asignados aleatoriamente a uno de dos grupos de tratamiento. Un grupo recibió EMTr sobre la CPFDL izquierda a 5Hz; el otro recibió estimulación a 1 Hz sobre la corteza contralateral. Se obtuvieron dos registros electroencefalográficos, uno basal y otro final, con el fin de comparar las medidas espectrales de banda ancha y estrecha, pretratamiento y postratamiento. Se realizaron evaluaciones clinimétricas con las escalas de Hamilton para Depresión y Ansiedad, la escala de Depresión de Montgomery-Asberg y el Inventario de Beck. No encontramos diferencias significativas al comparar la respuesta a la EMTr entre ambos grupos. Los pacientes de ambos grupos presentaron respuesta a tratamiento (disminución de ≥50% de la sintomatología depresiva) medida por clinimetría. El efecto más importante de la EMTr sobre el EEG se observó en el grupo de estimulación derecha a 1 Hz donde encontramos disminución postratamiento en los valores Z de banda estrecha alfa y beta, principalmente en regiones fronto-centro-temporales. Aunque en menor proporción, en el grupo de estimulación izquierda a 5 Hz encontramos incrementos significativos post EMTr, predominantemente en las bandas beta y alfa sobre todo en regiones anteriores. No se encontraron resultados significativos en el análisis de banda ancha. Nuestros resultados sugieren que la administración de 15 sesiones de EMTr ya sea sobre la CPFDL derecha (1 Hz) o izquierda (5 Hz) es capaz de lograr respuesta antidepresiva. Nuestros hallazgos electrofisiológicos sugieren que uno de los efectos a largo plazo de la EMTr es la reorganización de los circuitos neuronales implicados en la depresión.

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