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J Appl Physiol 95: 1394-1404, 2003. First published June 20, 2003; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01095.2002
8750-7587/03 $5.00
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Cardiovascular variability after arousal from sleep: time-varying spectral analysis

Anna Blasi,1 Javier Jo,1 Edwin Valladares,1 Barbara J. Morgan,2 James B. Skatrud,2 and Michael C. K. Khoo1

1Biomedical Engineering Department, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089; and 2Departments of Medicine, and Orthopedics & Rehabilitation, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin

Submitted 2 December 2002 ; accepted in final form 13 June 2003

We performed time-varying spectral analyses of heart rate variability (HRV) and blood pressure variability (BPV) recorded from 16 normal humans during acoustically induced arousals from sleep. Time-varying autoregressive modeling was employed to estimate the time courses of high-frequency HRV power, low-frequency HRV power, the ratio between low-frequency and high-frequency HRV power, and low-frequency power of systolic BPV. To delineate the influence of respiration on HRV, we also computed respiratory airflow high-frequency power, the modified ratio of low-frequency to high-frequency HRV power, and the average transfer gain between respiration and heart rate. During cortical arousal, muscle sympathetic nerve activity and heart rate increased and returned rapidly to baseline, but systolic blood pressure, the ratio between low-frequency and high-frequency HRV power, low-frequency HRV power, the modified ratio of low-frequency to high-frequency HRV power, and low-frequency power of systolic BPV displayed increases that remained above baseline up to 40 s after arousal. High-frequency HRV power and airflow high-frequency power showed concommitant decreases to levels below baseline, whereas the average transfer gain between respiration and heart rate remained unchanged. These findings suggest that 1) arousal-induced changes in parasympathetic activity are strongly coupled to respiratory pattern and 2) the sympathoexcitatory cardiovascular effects of arousal are relatively long lasting and may accumulate if repetitive arousals occur in close succession.

autonomic nervous system; heart rate variability; blood pressure variability; sleep-disordered breathing; mathematical modeling; physiological oscillations



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. C. K. Khoo, Biomedical Engineering Dept., OHE-500, Univ. Park, Los Angeles, CA 90089-1451 (E-mail: khoo{at}bmsr.usc.edu).




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