From the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Van Voorhees, P.A. Dennis, Patel, Calhoun, M.F. Dennis, Beckham); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center (Van Voorhees, P.A. Dennis, Watkins, Patel, Calhoun, M.F. Dennis, Beckham); Veterans Affairs Mid-Atlantic Region Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center (Calhoun, Beckham), Durham; and Durham Veterans Affairs Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care (Calhoun), Durham, North Carolina.
Psychosom Med. 2022;84(2):210-214. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000001010.
Heart rate variability (HRV) is a useful index of psychological and physiological stress. Although several wristband devices have purported to measure HRV, none have demonstrated reliability when compared with the criterion-standard Holter monitor. We evaluated the reliability of HRV readings from the Empatica E4 wristband compared with a Holter monitor over a 24-hour period of simultaneous monitoring.
Agreement between the monitors was assessed by examining correlations and intraclass correlations (ICCs) for fixed sets in 13 individuals in a treatment trial for posttraumatic stress disorder (4 women; mean [standard deviation] age = 51.92 [6.17] years). Agreement was calculated at 1-second and 5-minute intervals for interbeat intervals (IBIs) and for 5-minute intervals of the root mean square of successive differences between normal heartbeats (RMSSD) and standard deviation of all normal R-R intervals (SDNN). Agreement across the entire 24-hour observation period was also measured. Frequency-domain measures of HRV could not be calculated because of too much missing data from the E4.
Although high interdevice correlations and ICCs were observed between the E4 and Holter monitors for IBIs at 1-second (median r = 0.88; median ICC = 0.87) and 5-minute (median r = 0.94; median ICC = 0.94) intervals, reliabilities for 5-minute RMSSD (median r = -0.09; median ICC = -0.05) and 5-minute SDNN (median r = 0.48; median ICC = 0.47) were poor. Agreement between the devices on 24-hour measures of HRV was satisfactory (IBI: r = 0.97, ICC = 0.97; RMSSD: r = 0.77, IBI = 0.76; SDNN: r = 0.92, IBI = 0.89).
Findings suggest that the low reliability of Empatica E4 as compared with the Holter monitor does not justify its use in ambulatory research for the measurement of HRV over time periods of 5 minutes or less.
心率变异性(HRV)是心理和生理压力的有用指标。尽管有几种腕带设备声称可以测量 HRV,但与标准的 Holter 监测仪相比,没有一种设备能够证明其可靠性。我们评估了 Empatica E4 腕带在 24 小时同步监测期间与 Holter 监测仪相比的 HRV 读数的可靠性。
通过在创伤后应激障碍治疗试验中的 13 名个体(4 名女性;平均[标准差]年龄=51.92[6.17]岁)中检查固定集的相关性和组内相关系数(ICC)来评估监测仪之间的一致性。在 1 秒和 5 分钟的时间间隔内,为心动间隔(IBI)和正常心跳之间连续差异的均方根(RMSSD)和所有正常 R-R 间隔的标准差(SDNN)的 5 分钟间隔计算了一致性。还测量了整个 24 小时观察期的一致性。由于 E4 数据缺失过多,无法计算 HRV 的频域测量值。
尽管 E4 和 Holter 监测仪在 1 秒(中位数 r=0.88;中位数 ICC=0.87)和 5 分钟(中位数 r=0.94;中位数 ICC=0.94)间隔的 IBI 之间观察到高的设备间相关性和 ICC,但 5 分钟 RMSSD(中位数 r=-0.09;中位数 ICC=-0.05)和 5 分钟 SDNN(中位数 r=0.48;中位数 ICC=0.47)的可靠性较差。两种设备在 24 小时 HRV 测量值上的一致性令人满意(IBI:r=0.97,ICC=0.97;RMSSD:r=0.77,IBI=0.76;SDNN:r=0.92,IBI=0.89)。
研究结果表明,与 Holter 监测仪相比,Empatica E4 的可靠性较低,因此不支持在 5 分钟或更短的时间段内进行 HRV 的动态测量。