Comparisons of Heart Rate Variability Responses to Head-up Tilt With and Without Abdominal and Lower-Extremity Compression in Healthy Young Individuals: A Randomized Crossover Study

Author:

Oyake KazuakiORCID,Katai Miyuki,Yoneyama Anzu,Ikegawa Hazuki,Kani Shigeru,Momose KimitoORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTIntroductionAbdominal and lower-extremity compression techniques can help reduce orthostatic heart rate increase. However, the effects of body compression on the cardiac autonomic systems, which control heart rate, remain unclear. This study aimed 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.MethodsIn 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 Stress Index, root mean square of successive differences between adjacent R-R intervals, low- and high-frequency components, and low-to-high frequency ratio.ResultsAbdominal and lower-extremity compression reduced the orthostatic increase in heart rate (p < 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 (p < 0.001). Additionally, multiple regression analysis with potentially confounding variables revealed that the compression-induced decrease 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, p = 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.ConclusionOur findings could contribute to the appropriate application of compression therapy for preventing orthostatic tachycardia. This study is registered with UMIN000045179.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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