Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.

Aim was to elucidate autonomic responses to dynamic and static (isometric) exercise of the lower limbs eliciting the same moderate heart rate (HR) response.23 males performed two kinds of voluntary exercise in a supine position at similar heart rates: static exercise (SE) of the lower limbs (static...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthias Weippert, Kristin Behrens, Annika Rieger, Regina Stoll, Steffi Kreuzfeld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3862773?pdf=render
id doaj-4cd37e61e38042fcbcf59ec779ffab62
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4cd37e61e38042fcbcf59ec779ffab622020-11-25T01:22:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01812e8369010.1371/journal.pone.0083690Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.Matthias WeippertKristin BehrensAnnika RiegerRegina StollSteffi KreuzfeldAim was to elucidate autonomic responses to dynamic and static (isometric) exercise of the lower limbs eliciting the same moderate heart rate (HR) response.23 males performed two kinds of voluntary exercise in a supine position at similar heart rates: static exercise (SE) of the lower limbs (static leg press) and dynamic exercise (DE) of the lower limbs (cycling). Subjective effort, systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), rate pressure product (RPP) and the time between consecutive heart beats (RR-intervals) were measured. Time-domain (SDNN, RMSSD), frequency-domain (power in the low and high frequency band (LFP, HFP)) and geometric measures (SD1, SD2) as well as non-linear measures of regularity (approximate entropy (ApEn), sample entropy (SampEn) and correlation dimension D2) were calculated.Although HR was similar during both exercise conditions (88±10 bpm), subjective effort, SBP, DBP, MAP and RPP were significantly enhanced during SE. HRV indicators representing overall variability (SDNN, SD 2) and vagal modulated variability (RMSSD, HFP, SD 1) were increased. LFP, thought to be modulated by both autonomic branches, tended to be higher during SE. ApEn and SampEn were decreased whereas D2 was enhanced during SE. It can be concluded that autonomic control processes during SE and DE were qualitatively different despite similar heart rate levels. The differences were reflected by blood pressure and HRV indices. HRV-measures indicated a stronger vagal cardiac activity during SE, while blood pressure response indicated a stronger sympathetic efferent activity to the vessels. The elevated vagal cardiac activity during SE might be a response mechanism, compensating a possible co-activation of sympathetic cardiac efferents, as HR and LF/HF was similar and LFP tended to be higher. However, this conclusion must be drawn cautiously as there is no HRV-marker reflecting "pure" sympathetic cardiac activity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3862773?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthias Weippert
Kristin Behrens
Annika Rieger
Regina Stoll
Steffi Kreuzfeld
spellingShingle Matthias Weippert
Kristin Behrens
Annika Rieger
Regina Stoll
Steffi Kreuzfeld
Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matthias Weippert
Kristin Behrens
Annika Rieger
Regina Stoll
Steffi Kreuzfeld
author_sort Matthias Weippert
title Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
title_short Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
title_full Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
title_fullStr Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
title_full_unstemmed Heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
title_sort heart rate variability and blood pressure during dynamic and static exercise at similar heart rate levels.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Aim was to elucidate autonomic responses to dynamic and static (isometric) exercise of the lower limbs eliciting the same moderate heart rate (HR) response.23 males performed two kinds of voluntary exercise in a supine position at similar heart rates: static exercise (SE) of the lower limbs (static leg press) and dynamic exercise (DE) of the lower limbs (cycling). Subjective effort, systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), rate pressure product (RPP) and the time between consecutive heart beats (RR-intervals) were measured. Time-domain (SDNN, RMSSD), frequency-domain (power in the low and high frequency band (LFP, HFP)) and geometric measures (SD1, SD2) as well as non-linear measures of regularity (approximate entropy (ApEn), sample entropy (SampEn) and correlation dimension D2) were calculated.Although HR was similar during both exercise conditions (88±10 bpm), subjective effort, SBP, DBP, MAP and RPP were significantly enhanced during SE. HRV indicators representing overall variability (SDNN, SD 2) and vagal modulated variability (RMSSD, HFP, SD 1) were increased. LFP, thought to be modulated by both autonomic branches, tended to be higher during SE. ApEn and SampEn were decreased whereas D2 was enhanced during SE. It can be concluded that autonomic control processes during SE and DE were qualitatively different despite similar heart rate levels. The differences were reflected by blood pressure and HRV indices. HRV-measures indicated a stronger vagal cardiac activity during SE, while blood pressure response indicated a stronger sympathetic efferent activity to the vessels. The elevated vagal cardiac activity during SE might be a response mechanism, compensating a possible co-activation of sympathetic cardiac efferents, as HR and LF/HF was similar and LFP tended to be higher. However, this conclusion must be drawn cautiously as there is no HRV-marker reflecting "pure" sympathetic cardiac activity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3862773?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT matthiasweippert heartratevariabilityandbloodpressureduringdynamicandstaticexerciseatsimilarheartratelevels
AT kristinbehrens heartratevariabilityandbloodpressureduringdynamicandstaticexerciseatsimilarheartratelevels
AT annikarieger heartratevariabilityandbloodpressureduringdynamicandstaticexerciseatsimilarheartratelevels
AT reginastoll heartratevariabilityandbloodpressureduringdynamicandstaticexerciseatsimilarheartratelevels
AT steffikreuzfeld heartratevariabilityandbloodpressureduringdynamicandstaticexerciseatsimilarheartratelevels
_version_ 1725127887053389824