Short-term complexity of cardiac autonomic control during sleep: REM as a potential risk factor for cardiovascular system in aging
Short-term complexity of cardiac autonomic control during sleep: REM as a potential risk factor for cardiovascular system in aging
Introduction: Sleep is a complex phenomenon characterized by important modifications throughout life and by changes of autonomic cardiovascular control. Aging is associated with a reduction of the overall heart rate variability (HRV) and a decrease of complexity of autonomic cardiac regulation. The aim of our study was to evaluate the HRV complexity using two entropy-derived measures, Shannon Entropy (SE) and Corrected Conditional Entropy (CCE), during sleep in young and older subjects.
Methods: A polysomnographic study was performed in 12 healthy young (21.1±0.8 years) and 12 healthy older subjects (64.9±1.9 years). After the sleep scoring, heart period time series were divided into wake (W), Stage 1–2 (S1-2), Stage 3–4 (S3-4) and REM. Two complexity indexes were assessed: SE(3) measuring the complexity of a distribution of 3-beat patterns (SE(3) is higher when all the patterns are identically distributed and it is lower when some patterns are more likely) and CCEmin measuring the minimum amount of information that cannot be derived from the knowledge of previous values.
Results: Across the different sleep stages, young subjects had similar RR interval, total variance, SE(3) and CCEmin. In the older group, SE(3) and CCEmin were reduced during REM sleep compared to S1-2, S3-4 and W. Compared to young subjects, during W and sleep the older subjects showed a lower RR interval and reduced total variance as well as a significant reduction of SE(3) and CCEmin. This decrease of entropy measures was more evident during REM sleep.
Conclusion: Our study indicates that aging is characterized by a reduction of entropy indices of cardiovascular variability during wake/sleep cycle, more evident during REM sleep. We conclude that during aging REM sleep is associated with a simplification of cardiac control mechanisms that could lead to an impaired ability of the cardiovascular system to react to cardiovascular adverse events.
Viola, Antoine U.
4d8ca660-83e3-4a76-bb2d-5a34030ad0d2
Tobaldini, Eleonora
afc67539-ae94-4160-9ebc-ba05aa7bfa30
Chellappa, Sarah L.
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Rabello Casali, Karina
4fa43ae1-86d1-4d78-b381-e7748a992ef2
Porta, Alberto
ff6d1625-3156-415e-bb9e-85e5949ec2dc
Montano, Nicola
b226ebcc-288c-4057-b284-610cf983b105
22 April 2011
Viola, Antoine U.
4d8ca660-83e3-4a76-bb2d-5a34030ad0d2
Tobaldini, Eleonora
afc67539-ae94-4160-9ebc-ba05aa7bfa30
Chellappa, Sarah L.
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Rabello Casali, Karina
4fa43ae1-86d1-4d78-b381-e7748a992ef2
Porta, Alberto
ff6d1625-3156-415e-bb9e-85e5949ec2dc
Montano, Nicola
b226ebcc-288c-4057-b284-610cf983b105
Viola, Antoine U., Tobaldini, Eleonora, Chellappa, Sarah L., Rabello Casali, Karina, Porta, Alberto and Montano, Nicola
(2011)
Short-term complexity of cardiac autonomic control during sleep: REM as a potential risk factor for cardiovascular system in aging.
PLoS ONE, 6 (4), [e19002].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019002).
Abstract
Introduction: Sleep is a complex phenomenon characterized by important modifications throughout life and by changes of autonomic cardiovascular control. Aging is associated with a reduction of the overall heart rate variability (HRV) and a decrease of complexity of autonomic cardiac regulation. The aim of our study was to evaluate the HRV complexity using two entropy-derived measures, Shannon Entropy (SE) and Corrected Conditional Entropy (CCE), during sleep in young and older subjects.
Methods: A polysomnographic study was performed in 12 healthy young (21.1±0.8 years) and 12 healthy older subjects (64.9±1.9 years). After the sleep scoring, heart period time series were divided into wake (W), Stage 1–2 (S1-2), Stage 3–4 (S3-4) and REM. Two complexity indexes were assessed: SE(3) measuring the complexity of a distribution of 3-beat patterns (SE(3) is higher when all the patterns are identically distributed and it is lower when some patterns are more likely) and CCEmin measuring the minimum amount of information that cannot be derived from the knowledge of previous values.
Results: Across the different sleep stages, young subjects had similar RR interval, total variance, SE(3) and CCEmin. In the older group, SE(3) and CCEmin were reduced during REM sleep compared to S1-2, S3-4 and W. Compared to young subjects, during W and sleep the older subjects showed a lower RR interval and reduced total variance as well as a significant reduction of SE(3) and CCEmin. This decrease of entropy measures was more evident during REM sleep.
Conclusion: Our study indicates that aging is characterized by a reduction of entropy indices of cardiovascular variability during wake/sleep cycle, more evident during REM sleep. We conclude that during aging REM sleep is associated with a simplification of cardiac control mechanisms that could lead to an impaired ability of the cardiovascular system to react to cardiovascular adverse events.
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Published date: 22 April 2011
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Local EPrints ID: 480213
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480213
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 22e88528-e82b-4116-afd1-78f219d87db9
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:06
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:21
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Author:
Antoine U. Viola
Author:
Eleonora Tobaldini
Author:
Sarah L. Chellappa
Author:
Karina Rabello Casali
Author:
Alberto Porta
Author:
Nicola Montano
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