Oyake Kazuaki, Katai Miyuki, Yoneyama Anzu, Ikegawa Hazuki, Kani Shigeru, Momose Kimito
Department of Physical Therapy, School of Health Sciences, Shinshu University, Matsumoto, Japan.
Front Physiol. 2024 Jan 8;14:1269079. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1269079. eCollection 2023.
Abdominal and lower-extremity compression techniques can help reduce orthostatic heart rate increases. However, the effects of body compression on the cardiac autonomic systems, which control heart rate, remain unclear. The primary objective of this study was to compare heart rate variability, a reflection of cardiac autonomic regulation, during a head-up tilt test with and without abdominal and lower-extremity compression in healthy young individuals. The secondary objective was to conduct a subgroup analysis, considering participant sex, and compare heart rate and heart rate variability responses to head-up tilt with and without compression therapy. In a randomized crossover design, 39 healthy volunteers (20 females, aged 20.9 ± 1.2 years) underwent two head-up tilt tests with and without abdominal and lower-extremity compression. Heart rate and heart rate variability parameters were measured during the head-up tilt tests, including the Stress Index, root mean square of successive differences between adjacent R-R intervals, low- and high-frequency components, and low-to-high frequency ratio. Abdominal and lower-extremity compression reduced the orthostatic increase in heart rate ( < 0.001). The tilt-induced changes in heart rate variability parameters, except for the low-frequency component, were smaller in the compression condition than in the no-compression condition ( < 0.001). These results were consistent regardless of sex. Additionally, multiple regression analysis with potentially confounding variables revealed that the compression-induced reduction in Stress Index during the head-up tilt position was a significant independent variable for the compression-induced reduction in heart rate in the head-up tilt position (coefficient = 0.411, = 0.025). Comparative analyses revealed that abdominal and lower-extremity compression has a notable impact on the compensatory sympathetic activation and vagal withdrawal typically observed during orthostasis, resulting in a reduction of the increase in heart rate. Furthermore, this decrease in heart rate was primarily attributed to the attenuation of cardiac sympathetic activity associated with compression. Our findings could contribute to the appropriate application of compression therapy for preventing orthostatic tachycardia. This study is registered with UMIN000045179.
腹部和下肢压迫技术有助于减少直立性心率增加。然而,身体压迫对控制心率的心脏自主神经系统的影响仍不清楚。本研究的主要目的是比较健康年轻个体在进行头高位倾斜试验时,有和没有腹部及下肢压迫情况下的心率变异性(反映心脏自主调节)。次要目的是进行亚组分析,考虑参与者性别,比较有和没有压迫治疗时头高位倾斜试验的心率和心率变异性反应。在随机交叉设计中,39名健康志愿者(20名女性,年龄20.9±1.2岁)进行了两次头高位倾斜试验,一次有腹部及下肢压迫,一次没有。在头高位倾斜试验期间测量心率和心率变异性参数,包括应激指数、相邻R-R间期连续差值的均方根、低频和高频成分以及低频与高频比值。腹部和下肢压迫降低了直立性心率增加(P<0.001)。除低频成分外,压迫状态下头高位倾斜试验引起的心率变异性参数变化比无压迫状态下小(P<0.001)。无论性别,这些结果都是一致的。此外,对潜在混杂变量进行的多元回归分析显示,头高位倾斜位时压迫引起的应激指数降低是头高位倾斜位压迫引起的心率降低的显著独立变量(系数=0.411,P=0.025)。比较分析表明,腹部和下肢压迫对直立状态下通常观察到的代偿性交感神经激活和迷走神经撤离有显著影响,从而导致心率增加减少。此外,心率的这种降低主要归因于与压迫相关的心脏交感神经活动减弱。我们的研究结果可能有助于压迫疗法在预防直立性心动过速方面的适当应用。本研究已在UMIN000045179注册。