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1 Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada; Medicine, Toronto General Hospital/University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada; Medicine, Centre for Sleep Medicine and Circadian Biology, Toronto, ON, Canada
2 Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada
3 Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: richard.leung{at}utoronto.ca.
In subjects with sinus rhythm, respiration has a profound effect on heart rate variability (HRV) at high frequencies (HF). Because this HF respiratory arrhythmia is lost in atrial fibrillation (AF), it has been assumed that respiration does not influence the ventricular response. However, previous investigations have not considered the possibility that respiration might influence HRV at lower frequencies. We hypothesized that Cheyne-Stokes respiration with central sleep apnea (CSR-CSA) would entrain HRV at very low frequency (VLF) in AF by modulating atrioventricular (AV) nodal refractory period and concealed conduction. Power spectral analysis of RR-intervals and respiration during sleep were performed in 13 subjects with AF and CSR-CSA. As anticipated, no modulation of HRV was detected at HF during regular breathing. In contrast, VLF HRV was entrained by CSR-CSA (coherence between respiration and HRV of 0.69 ± 0.22 at VLF during CSR-CSA vs 0.20 ± 0.19 at HF during regular breathing, p < 0.001). Comparison of RR-intervals during CSR-CSA demonstrated a shorter AV node refractory period during hyperpnea than apnea (minimum RR of 684 ± 126 vs 735 ± 147 msec, p < 0.001) and a lesser degree of concealed conduction (scatter of 178 ± 56 vs 246 ± 72 msec, p = 0.001). We conclude that CSR-CSA entrains the ventricular response to AF, even in the absence of HF respiratory arrhythmia, by inducing rhythmic oscillations in AV node refractoriness and the degree of concealed conduction that may be a function of autonomic modulation of the AV node.
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