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Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling

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2020
1290.pdf (2.958Mb)
Authors
Matic, Zoran
Platisa, Mirjana M.
Kalauzi, Aleksandar
Bojic, Tijana
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Objective: We explored the physiological background of the non-linear operating mode of cardiorespiratory oscillators as the fundamental question of cardiorespiratory homeodynamics and as a prerequisite for the understanding of neurocardiovascular diseases. We investigated 20 healthy human subjects for changes using electrocardiac RR interval (RRI) and respiratory signal (Resp) Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA, alpha(1RRI), alpha(2RRI), alpha(1Resp), alpha(2Resp)), Multiple Scaling Entropy (MSERRI1-4, MSERRI5-10, MSEResp1-4, MSEResp5-10), spectral coherence (Coh(RRI-Resp)), cross DFA (rho(1) and rho(2)) and cross MSE (XMSE1-4 and XMSE5-10) indices in four physiological conditions: supine with spontaneous breathing, standing with spontaneous breathing, supine with 0.1 Hz breathing and standing with 0.1 Hz breathing. Main results: Standing is primarily characterized by the change of RRI parameters, insensitivity to change with respiratory parameters, decrease of Coh(RRI-Resp) and inse...nsitivity to change of in rho(1), rho(2), XMSE1-4, and XMSE5-10. Slow breathing in supine position was characterized by the change of the linear and non-linear parameters of both signals, reflecting the dominant vagal RRI modulation and the impact of slow 0.1 Hz breathing on Resp parameters. Coh(RRI-Resp) did not change with respect to supine position, while rho(1) increased. Slow breathing in standing reflected the qualitatively specific state of autonomic regulation with striking impact on both cardiac and respiratory parameters, with specific patterns of cardiorespiratory coupling.

Keywords:
slow breathing / RR interval variability / respiration rhythm variability / orthostasis / complexity / cardiorespiratory coupling
Source:
Frontiers in Physiology, 2020, 11
Publisher:
  • Frontiers Media Sa, Lausanne
Funding / projects:
  • An integral study to identify the regional genetic and environmental risk factors for the common noncommunicable diseases in the human population of Serbia - INGEMA_S (RS-41028)
  • Development of new technology for production of red wine and diatery supplements reach with polyphenols with cardioprotective effects (RS-31020)

DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00024

ISSN: 1664-042X

PubMed: 32132926

WoS: 000528059900001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85080921460
[ Google Scholar ]
12
2
URI
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1293
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Matic, Zoran
AU  - Platisa, Mirjana M.
AU  - Kalauzi, Aleksandar
AU  - Bojic, Tijana
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1293
AB  - Objective: We explored the physiological background of the non-linear operating mode of cardiorespiratory oscillators as the fundamental question of cardiorespiratory homeodynamics and as a prerequisite for the understanding of neurocardiovascular diseases. We investigated 20 healthy human subjects for changes using electrocardiac RR interval (RRI) and respiratory signal (Resp) Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA, alpha(1RRI), alpha(2RRI), alpha(1Resp), alpha(2Resp)), Multiple Scaling Entropy (MSERRI1-4, MSERRI5-10, MSEResp1-4, MSEResp5-10), spectral coherence (Coh(RRI-Resp)), cross DFA (rho(1) and rho(2)) and cross MSE (XMSE1-4 and XMSE5-10) indices in four physiological conditions: supine with spontaneous breathing, standing with spontaneous breathing, supine with 0.1 Hz breathing and standing with 0.1 Hz breathing. Main results: Standing is primarily characterized by the change of RRI parameters, insensitivity to change with respiratory parameters, decrease of Coh(RRI-Resp) and insensitivity to change of in rho(1), rho(2), XMSE1-4, and XMSE5-10. Slow breathing in supine position was characterized by the change of the linear and non-linear parameters of both signals, reflecting the dominant vagal RRI modulation and the impact of slow 0.1 Hz breathing on Resp parameters. Coh(RRI-Resp) did not change with respect to supine position, while rho(1) increased. Slow breathing in standing reflected the qualitatively specific state of autonomic regulation with striking impact on both cardiac and respiratory parameters, with specific patterns of cardiorespiratory coupling.
PB  - Frontiers Media Sa, Lausanne
T2  - Frontiers in Physiology
T1  - Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling
VL  - 11
DO  - 10.3389/fphys.2020.00024
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Matic, Zoran and Platisa, Mirjana M. and Kalauzi, Aleksandar and Bojic, Tijana",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Objective: We explored the physiological background of the non-linear operating mode of cardiorespiratory oscillators as the fundamental question of cardiorespiratory homeodynamics and as a prerequisite for the understanding of neurocardiovascular diseases. We investigated 20 healthy human subjects for changes using electrocardiac RR interval (RRI) and respiratory signal (Resp) Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA, alpha(1RRI), alpha(2RRI), alpha(1Resp), alpha(2Resp)), Multiple Scaling Entropy (MSERRI1-4, MSERRI5-10, MSEResp1-4, MSEResp5-10), spectral coherence (Coh(RRI-Resp)), cross DFA (rho(1) and rho(2)) and cross MSE (XMSE1-4 and XMSE5-10) indices in four physiological conditions: supine with spontaneous breathing, standing with spontaneous breathing, supine with 0.1 Hz breathing and standing with 0.1 Hz breathing. Main results: Standing is primarily characterized by the change of RRI parameters, insensitivity to change with respiratory parameters, decrease of Coh(RRI-Resp) and insensitivity to change of in rho(1), rho(2), XMSE1-4, and XMSE5-10. Slow breathing in supine position was characterized by the change of the linear and non-linear parameters of both signals, reflecting the dominant vagal RRI modulation and the impact of slow 0.1 Hz breathing on Resp parameters. Coh(RRI-Resp) did not change with respect to supine position, while rho(1) increased. Slow breathing in standing reflected the qualitatively specific state of autonomic regulation with striking impact on both cardiac and respiratory parameters, with specific patterns of cardiorespiratory coupling.",
publisher = "Frontiers Media Sa, Lausanne",
journal = "Frontiers in Physiology",
title = "Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling",
volume = "11",
doi = "10.3389/fphys.2020.00024"
}
Matic, Z., Platisa, M. M., Kalauzi, A.,& Bojic, T.. (2020). Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling. in Frontiers in Physiology
Frontiers Media Sa, Lausanne., 11.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00024
Matic Z, Platisa MM, Kalauzi A, Bojic T. Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling. in Frontiers in Physiology. 2020;11.
doi:10.3389/fphys.2020.00024 .
Matic, Zoran, Platisa, Mirjana M., Kalauzi, Aleksandar, Bojic, Tijana, "Slow 0.1 Hz Breathing and Body Posture Induced Perturbations of RRI and Respiratory Signal Complexity and Cardiorespiratory Coupling" in Frontiers in Physiology, 11 (2020),
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00024 . .

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