Autonomic Modulation, Spontaneous Baroreflex Sensitivity and Fatigue in Young Men After COVID-19

Author:

Latchman P1,Yang Q2,Morgenthaler D3,Kong L4,Sebagisha J5,Melendez L6,Green C7,Bernard S6,Mugno R8,De Meersman R9

Affiliation:

1. Southern Connecticut State University, Department of Health and Movement Sciences, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

2. School of Health Promotion and Kinesiology, Texas Woman’s University, Denton, Texas, USA

3. Southern Connecticut State University, Health Services, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

4. Department of Kinesiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA

5. Clinical Department St. James School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

6. Southern Connecticut State University, Department of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

7. Southern Connecticut State University, Department of Nursing, New Haven, Connecticut, USA,

8. Southern Connecticut State University, Department of Mathematics, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

9. Department of Rehabilitation and Regenerative Medicine, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA

Abstract

Impaired autonomic modulation and baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) have been reported during and after COVID-19. Both impairments are associated with negative cardiovascular outcomes. If these impairments were to exist undetected in young men after COVID-19, they could lead to negative cardiovascular outcomes. Fatigue is associated with autonomic dysfunction during and after COVID-19. It is unclear if fatigue can be used as an indicator of impaired autonomic modulation and BRS after COVID-19. This study aims to compare parasympathetic modulation, sympathetic modulation, and BRS between young men who had COVID-19 versus controls and to determine if fatigue is associated with impaired autonomic modulation and BRS. Parasympathetic modulation as the high-frequency power of R-R intervals (lnHFR-R), sympathetic modulation as the low-frequency power of systolic blood pressure variability (LFSBP), and BRS as the -index were measured by power spectral density analysis. These variables were compared between 20 young men who had COVID-19 and 24 controls. Independent t-tests and Mann-Whitney U tests indicated no significant difference between the COVID-19 and the control group in: lnHFR-R, P=0.20; LFSBP, P=0.11, and -index, P=0.20. Fatigue was not associated with impaired autonomic modulation or BRS. There is no difference in autonomic modulations or BRS between young men who had COVID-19 compared to controls. Fatigue did not seem to be associated with impaired autonomic modulation or impaired BRS in young men after COVID-19. Findings suggest that young men might not be at increased cardiovascular risk from COVID-19-related dysautonomia and impaired BRS.

Publisher

Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences

Subject

General Medicine,Physiology

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