Low-frequency power of heart rate variability is not a measure of cardiac sympathetic tone but may be a measure of modulation of cardiac autonomic outflows by baroreflexes

Author: David S Goldstein1, Oladi Bentho, Mee-Yeong Park, Yehonatan Sharabi
Affiliation:
1Clinical Neurocardiology Section, Clinical Neurosciences Program, Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1620, USA. goldsteind@ninds.nih.gov
Conference/Journal: Exp Physiol
Date published: 2011 Dec
Other: Volume ID: 96 , Issue ID: 12 , Pages: 1255-61 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.2010.056259. , Word Count: 96


Power spectral analysis of heart rate variability has often been used to assess cardiac autonomic function; however, the relationship of low-frequency (LF) power of heart rate variability to cardiac sympathetic tone has been unclear. With or without adjustment for high-frequency (HF) power, total power or respiration, LF power seems to provide an index not of cardiac sympathetic tone but of baroreflex function. Manipulations and drugs that change LF power or LF:HF may do so not by affecting cardiac autonomic outflows directly but by affecting modulation of those outflows by baroreflexes.

PMID: 21890520 PMCID: PMC3224799 DOI: 10.1113/expphysiol.2010.056259

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