Terroba-Chambi Cinthia, Bruno Veronica, Vigo Daniel E, Merello Marcelo
Movement Disorders Unit, Raul Carrea Institute of Neurological Research, Institute for Neurological Research (FLENI), Buenos Aires, Argentina.
National Scientific and Technological Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Clin Auton Res. 2021 Apr;31(2):281-292. doi: 10.1007/s10286-020-00669-2. Epub 2020 Feb 6.
Persons with Huntington's disease (HD) have a high incidence of falls. Autonomic nervous system dysfunction has been reported even in early stages of this disease. To date, there has been no analysis of the relationship between heart rate variability (HRV) and falls in this patient population. The aim of the study reported here was to evaluate the relationship between HRV and falls in persons with HD.
Huntington's disease patients enrolled in a prospective study on fear of falling and falls were assessed using short-term HRV analyses and blood pressure measures in both the resting and standing states. Time-frequency domains and nonlinear parameters were calculated. Data on falls, the risk of falling (RoF) and disease-specific scales were collected at baseline and at the end of the 6-month follow-up.
Of the 24 HD patients who were invited to participate in the study, 20 completed the baseline analysis and 18 completed the 6-month follow-up. At baseline, seven (35%) HD patients reported at least one fall (single fallers) and 13 (65%) reported ≥ 2 falls (recurrent fallers) in the previous 12 months. At baseline, recurrent fallers had lower RMSSD (root mean square of successive RR interval differences) in the resting state (RMSSD-resting), higher LF/HF (low/high frequency) ratio in both states and higher DFA-α1 parameter (detrended fluctuation analyses over the short term) in both states. This association was similar at the 6-month follow-up for recurrent fallers, who showed lower RMSSD-resting and higher LF/HF ratio in the standing state (LF/HF-standing) than single fallers. Significant correlations were found between the number of falls, RMSSD-resting and LF/HF-standing. No differences were found between recurrent and single fallers for any blood pressure measures.
The observed HRV pattern is consistent with a higher sympathetic prevalence associated with a higher RoF. Reduced parasympathetic HRV values in this patient population predict being a recurrent faller at 6 months of follow-up, independently of orthostatic phenomena.
亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)患者跌倒发生率较高。即便在该疾病的早期阶段,也有自主神经系统功能障碍的报道。迄今为止,尚未对该患者群体中心率变异性(HRV)与跌倒之间的关系进行分析。本文所报道研究的目的是评估HD患者中HRV与跌倒之间的关系。
对参与一项关于跌倒恐惧和跌倒的前瞻性研究的HD患者,在静息和站立状态下使用短期HRV分析和血压测量进行评估。计算时频域和非线性参数。在基线和6个月随访结束时收集跌倒数据、跌倒风险(RoF)和疾病特异性量表。
受邀参加该研究的24名HD患者中,20名完成了基线分析,18名完成了6个月随访。在基线时,7名(35%)HD患者报告在过去12个月中至少有一次跌倒(单次跌倒者),13名(65%)报告有≥2次跌倒(反复跌倒者)。在基线时,反复跌倒者在静息状态下的RMSSD(连续RR间期差异的均方根)较低(静息RMSSD),在两种状态下的LF/HF(低频/高频)比值较高,在两种状态下的DFA-α1参数(短期去趋势波动分析)较高。在6个月随访时,反复跌倒者的这种关联类似,他们在站立状态下的静息RMSSD较低,LF/HF比值(站立LF/HF)高于单次跌倒者。跌倒次数、静息RMSSD和站立LF/HF之间存在显著相关性。在任何血压测量方面,反复跌倒者和单次跌倒者之间均未发现差异。
观察到的HRV模式与较高的交感神经优势以及较高的RoF一致。该患者群体中副交感神经HRV值降低预示着在6个月随访时会成为反复跌倒者,与体位性现象无关。