Heart rate variability responses to cognitive stress in fibromyalgia are characterised by inadequate autonomous system stress responses: a clinical trial

被引:0
|
作者
Teemu Zetterman
Ritva Markkula
Teemu Miettinen
Eija Kalso
机构
[1] Helsinki University and Helsinki University Hospital,Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine
[2] University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital,Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care
[3] Wellbeing Services County of Vantaa and Kerava,SLEEPWELL Research Programme, Faculty of Medicine
[4] University of Helsinki,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fibromyalgia (FM) is associated with sympathetically dominant dysautonomia, but the connection between dysautonomia and FM symptoms is unclear. Dysautonomia can be analysed with heart rate variability (HRV) and it has been proposed that FM patients comprise subgroups with differing profiles of symptom severity. In our study, 51 female FM patients aged 18 to 65 years and 31 age-matched healthy female controls followed a 20-min protocol of alternating relaxation and cognitive stress (mental arithmetic). Heart rates and electrocardiograms were registered. The HRV measures of heart rate (HR), mean interval between heart beats (RRmean), root mean squared interval differences of successive beats (RMSSD), and the standard deviation of intervals between normal heart beats (SDNN) were analysed with generalized linear modelling. Features in HRV reactivity which differed between FM patients and controls were used to cluster the FM patients and cluster characteristics were analysed. FM patients had higher baseline HR (72.3 [SD 12.7] vs 64.5 [7.80], p < 0.001) and lower RRmean (0.844 [0.134] vs 0.934 [0.118], p = 0.002), compared with controls. They also reacted to repeated cognitive stress with an attenuated rise in HR (− 4.41 [95% CI − 7.88 to − 0.93], p = 0.013) and attenuated decrease of RRmean (0.06 [95 CI 0.03 to 0.09], p < 0.001), compared with controls. Clustering of FM patients by HRV reactivity resulted in three clusters characterised by (1) normal levels of HRV and HRV reactivity with low levels of depressive mood and anxiety, (2) reduced levels of HRV and impaired HRV reactivity with increased levels of depressive mood and high levels of anxiety, and (3) lowest HRV and most impaired HRV reactivity with the highest scores for depressive mood and anxiety. Our results show that FM patients have lower HRV than healthy controls and their autonomous reactions to cognitive stress are attenuated. Dysautonomia in FM associates with mood disturbance.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Maternal stress responses and anxiety during pregnancy: Effects on fetal heart rate
    Monk, C
    Fifer, WP
    Myers, MM
    Sloan, RP
    Trien, L
    Hurtado, A
    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, 2000, 36 (01) : 67 - 77
  • [42] Individual differences in resting heart rate variability and cognitive control in posttraumatic stress disorder
    Gillie, Brandon L.
    Thayer, Julian F.
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 5
  • [43] Salivary cortisol, heart rate, electrodermal activity and subjective stress responses to the Mannheim Multicomponent Stress Test (MMST)
    Reinhardt, Tatyana
    Schmahl, Christian
    Wuest, Stefan
    Bohus, Martin
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2012, 198 (01) : 106 - 111
  • [44] Automated classification of stress and relaxation responses in major depressive disorder, panic disorder, and healthy participants via heart rate variability
    Byun, Sangwon
    Kim, Ah Young
    Shin, Min-Sup
    Jeon, Hong Jin
    Cho, Chul-Hyun
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2025, 15
  • [45] Positive family history of type 2 diabetes reduces heart rate variability: responses to mental stress test and isometric exercise
    Sartori, M.
    Veloso Heeren, M.
    Valente Francica, J.
    Pereira, E. S.
    Mostarda, C.
    Irigoyen, M. C.
    De Angelis, K.
    EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL, 2011, 32 : 64 - 64
  • [46] VARIABILITY IN ACID STRESS RESPONSES OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI CLINICAL ISOLATES TOWARDS ACID ACCLIMATION
    Monteiro, J. G. T.
    Saraiva, L. M.
    Oleastro, M.
    HELICOBACTER, 2015, 20 : 121 - 121
  • [47] Placebo effect in processing laboratory stress: Electrodermal (EDR), heart rate, and EEG responses
    Shott, EK
    Davydov, DM
    Lysenko, NN
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 36 : S105 - S105
  • [48] CHILDRENS CARDIOVASCULAR REACTIVITY HEART RATE RESPONSES TO PSYCHOLOGIC STRESS AND THEIR MODULATION BY RACE OF EXPERIMENTER
    ALPERT, BS
    MURPHY, JK
    MOES, DM
    STRONG, WB
    PEDIATRIC RESEARCH, 1985, 19 (04) : A123 - A123
  • [49] Exhausted Heart Rate Responses to Repeated Psychological Stress in Women With Major Depressive Disorder
    Schiweck, Carmen
    Gholamrezaei, Ali
    Hellyn, Maxim
    Vaessen, Thomas
    Vrieze, Elske
    Claes, Stephan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 13
  • [50] INDIVIDUALS WITH REPORTED CHILDHOOD EMOTIONAL TRAUMA DISPLAY BLUNTED HEART RATE RESPONSES TO STRESS
    Webb, Adeline M.
    Rodenbaugh, Lee J.
    Young, Danielle A.
    Ginty, Annie T.
    PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2020, 82 (06): : A100 - A100