Short‐term heart rate variability: A potential approach to frailty assessment in older adults

Author:

Dewangan Gevesh Chand12ORCID,Singhal Sunny13ORCID,Chandran Dinu S.4,Khan Maroof Ahmad5,Dey Aparajit Ballav16,Chakrawarty Avinash1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geriatric Medicine All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

2. Department of General Medicine Employee's State Insurance Corporation Hospital Raipur Chhattisgarh India

3. Department of Geriatric Medicine Sawai Man Singh Medical College Jaipur Rajasthan India

4. Department of Physiology All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

5. Department of Biostatistics All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

6. Venu Geriatric Institute New Delhi India

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThis study aimed to evaluate cardiac autonomic modulation using short‐term heart rate variability (HRV) and compare it among frailty statuses in older Indian adults.MethodsA total of 210 subjects aged 60 years and above were recruited into three groups: frail (n = 70), pre‐frail (n = 70), and non‐frail (n = 70) from the outpatient department of Geriatric Medicine at a tertiary care hospital in India. Frailty status was assessed using the Rockwood frailty index (FI) criteria. HRV was derived from a 5‐min ECG recording of standard limb leads and assessed using time domain, frequency domain, and nonlinear analysis of cardiac interval variability.ResultsThe HRV parameters indicative of parasympathetic modulation such as SDNN, SDSD, rMSSD, NN50, pNN50, absolute HF power, and SD1 were significantly lower in frail subjects compared with both pre‐frail and non‐frail subjects (P < 0.05). Absolute LF power and SD2 were also lower in frail subjects compared with pre‐frail and non‐frail subjects (P < 0.05). Measures of sympatho‐vagal balance (LF/HF and SD1/SD2 ratios) did not show statistical significance. The FI demonstrated negative correlations with all HRV parameters.ConclusionsFrail individuals exhibit decreased sympathetic and parasympathetic modulation compared with pre‐frail and non‐frail individuals, although maintaining a balanced sympatho‐vagal state. Furthermore, autonomic modulation declines progressively with increasing frailty.

Publisher

Wiley

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