Circardian rhythm of cardiac nonlinear dynamics in healthy human

  • Yum, M.K. (Department of Pediatric Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Kim, N.S. (Department of Pediatric Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Oh, J.W. (Department of Pediatric Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Kim, C.R. (Department of Pediatric Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Lee, J.H. (Department of Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Kim, S.K. (Department of Cardiology, School of Medicine, Hanyang University) ;
  • Lee, J.M. (Department of Biomedical engineering, School of Medicine, Seoul National University)
  • Published : 1997.11.28

Abstract

In this study, we investigated the circardian rhythm of complexity of cardiac dynamics in humans. Dynamic 24-hour electrocardiographic recordings were obtained from 30 healthy ambulant subjects aged 41 to 50 years. or each recordings, normalized low frequency (0.04-0.1 hertz) and high frequency (>0.15 hertz) component are calculated. our different indexes obtained from separate algorithms of nonlinear dynamics - approximate entropy, correlation dimension, Lyapunov exponent and fractal dimension - were calculated. During early morning, low frequency component rose rapidly with concomitant withdrawl of high frequency component. All the our indexes of nonlinear dynamics showed remarkably same circardian rhythm: an early morning dip preceded by a steep decline during late night, a gradual recovery during evening and a peak around midnight. These data indicate that the simultansous losses of all of the our different mechanisms of nonlinear control of heart rate during early morning, concomitent with the surge of symapathetic activity and reduction of vagal activity, may contribute to the increased incidence of cardiovascular events during morning hours.

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