Cardiac Autonomic Dysfunction Measured as Reduced Heart Rate Variability, in the Intermediate Post-Covid State in Men

Abstract Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3-6 months after...

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Published inCurrent Medical Issues Vol. 22; no. 1; pp. 14 - 20
Main Authors Senthamizselvan, R., Tharion, Elizabeth, George, Krupa, Zachariah, Anand, Rani, Jansi, Rebekah, Grace, Christudoss, Pamela
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published India Wolters Kluwer - Medknow 2024
Medknow Publications and Media Pvt. Ltd
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
Edition2
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0973-4651
2666-4054
DOI10.4103/cmi.cmi_71_23

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Abstract Abstract Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3-6 months after recovery) is not known and was the question we addressed in the current study. Methods: An analytical observational cross-sectional study compared the heart rate variability (HRV), 8 AM serum cortisol concentration, and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) scores between COVID-19 recovered participants and their age-matched control subjects (21 male participants, 30-70 years of age, in each group). Results: The median (Q1-Q3) of low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and total powers of HRV was significantly reduced in those who recovered from severe COVID-19, compared to control subjects (respectively LF power: 410.871 [245.10-861.94], 947.57 [536.11-1778.55], P = 0.011; HF power: 192.916 [87.66-564.43], 705.18 [248.67-1192.19] P = 0.013; Total power: 646.33 [308.72-1518.28], 1613.33 [956.14-4022.55] P = 0.015, Mann-Whitney U-test). Serum cortisol and DASS-21 scores were not different from the control group. Conclusions: Impaired cardiac autonomic function, evidenced by reduced HRV, was observed in the intermediate period following recovery from severe COVID-19. However, psychological stress and elevated serum cortisol were not noted. Our result that exposes the effect of COVID-19 on cardiac autonomic responsiveness is important as diminished HRV increases the vulnerability of COVID-19 survivors to diseases. These findings may also suggest a focus of therapy in them, as specific interventions are known to improve HRV and cardiac autonomic functioning.
AbstractList Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3-6 months after recovery) is not known and was the question we addressed in the current study. Methods: An analytical observational cross-sectional study compared the heart rate variability (HRV), 8 AM serum cortisol concentration, and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) scores between COVID-19 recovered participants and their age-matched control subjects (21 male participants, 30-70 years of age, in each group). Results: The median (Q1-Q3) of low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and total powers of HRV was significantly reduced in those who recovered from severe COVID-19, compared to control subjects (respectively LF power: 410.871 [245.10-861.94], 947.57 [536.11-1778.55], P = 0.011; HF power: 192.916 [87.66-564.43], 705.18 [248.67-1192.19] P = 0.013; Total power: 646.33 [308.72-1518.28], 1613.33 [956.14-4022.55] P = 0.015, Mann-Whitney U-test). Serum cortisol and DASS-21 scores were not different from the control group. Conclusions: Impaired cardiac autonomic function, evidenced by reduced HRV, was observed in the intermediate period following recovery from severe COVID-19. However, psychological stress and elevated serum cortisol were not noted. Our result that exposes the effect of COVID-19 on cardiac autonomic responsiveness is important as diminished HRV increases the vulnerability of COVID-19 survivors to diseases. These findings may also suggest a focus of therapy in them, as specific interventions are known to improve HRV and cardiac autonomic functioning. Keywords: Autonomic dysfunction, cardiac autonomic, coronavirus disease 2019, heart rate variability, post-coronavirus disease, stress
Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3–6 months after recovery) is not known and was the question we addressed in the current study. Methods: An analytical observational cross-sectional study compared the heart rate variability (HRV), 8 AM serum cortisol concentration, and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale–21 (DASS-21) scores between COVID-19 recovered participants and their age-matched control subjects (21 male participants, 30–70 years of age, in each group). Results: The median (Q1–Q3) of low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and total powers of HRV was significantly reduced in those who recovered from severe COVID-19, compared to control subjects (respectively LF power: 410.871 [245.10–861.94], 947.57 [536.11–1778.55], P = 0.011; HF power: 192.916 [87.66–564.43], 705.18 [248.67–1192.19] P = 0.013; Total power: 646.33 [308.72–1518.28], 1613.33 [956.14–4022.55] P = 0.015, Mann–Whitney U-test). Serum cortisol and DASS-21 scores were not different from the control group. Conclusions: Impaired cardiac autonomic function, evidenced by reduced HRV, was observed in the intermediate period following recovery from severe COVID-19. However, psychological stress and elevated serum cortisol were not noted. Our result that exposes the effect of COVID-19 on cardiac autonomic responsiveness is important as diminished HRV increases the vulnerability of COVID-19 survivors to diseases. These findings may also suggest a focus of therapy in them, as specific interventions are known to improve HRV and cardiac autonomic functioning.
Abstract Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3-6 months after recovery) is not known and was the question we addressed in the current study. Methods: An analytical observational cross-sectional study compared the heart rate variability (HRV), 8 AM serum cortisol concentration, and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) scores between COVID-19 recovered participants and their age-matched control subjects (21 male participants, 30-70 years of age, in each group). Results: The median (Q1-Q3) of low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and total powers of HRV was significantly reduced in those who recovered from severe COVID-19, compared to control subjects (respectively LF power: 410.871 [245.10-861.94], 947.57 [536.11-1778.55], P = 0.011; HF power: 192.916 [87.66-564.43], 705.18 [248.67-1192.19] P = 0.013; Total power: 646.33 [308.72-1518.28], 1613.33 [956.14-4022.55] P = 0.015, Mann-Whitney U-test). Serum cortisol and DASS-21 scores were not different from the control group. Conclusions: Impaired cardiac autonomic function, evidenced by reduced HRV, was observed in the intermediate period following recovery from severe COVID-19. However, psychological stress and elevated serum cortisol were not noted. Our result that exposes the effect of COVID-19 on cardiac autonomic responsiveness is important as diminished HRV increases the vulnerability of COVID-19 survivors to diseases. These findings may also suggest a focus of therapy in them, as specific interventions are known to improve HRV and cardiac autonomic functioning.
A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the manifestations of excessive stress experience persist beyond full recovery into the intermediate post-COVID period (3-6 months after recovery) is not known and was the question we addressed in the current study. An analytical observational cross-sectional study compared the heart rate variability (HRV), 8 AM serum cortisol concentration, and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) scores between COVID-19 recovered participants and their age-matched control subjects (21 male participants, 30-70 years of age, in each group). The median (Q1-Q3) of low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and total powers of HRV was significantly reduced in those who recovered from severe COVID-19, compared to control subjects (respectively LF power: 410.871 [245.10-861.94], 947.57 [536.11-1778.55], P = 0.011; HF power: 192.916 [87.66-564.43], 705.18 [248.67-1192.19] P = 0.013; Total power: 646.33 [308.72-1518.28], 1613.33 [956.14-4022.55] P = 0.015, Mann-Whitney U-test). Serum cortisol and DASS-21 scores were not different from the control group. Impaired cardiac autonomic function, evidenced by reduced HRV, was observed in the intermediate period following recovery from severe COVID-19. However, psychological stress and elevated serum cortisol were not noted. Our result that exposes the effect of COVID-19 on cardiac autonomic responsiveness is important as diminished HRV increases the vulnerability of COVID-19 survivors to diseases. These findings may also suggest a focus of therapy in them, as specific interventions are known to improve HRV and cardiac autonomic functioning.
Audience Academic
Author Senthamizselvan, R.
George, Krupa
Rebekah, Grace
Rani, Jansi
Zachariah, Anand
Christudoss, Pamela
Tharion, Elizabeth
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Snippet Abstract Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses....
Background: A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the...
A critical illness such as severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) activates autonomic, endocrine, and emotional stress responses. Whether the...
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StartPage 14
SubjectTerms autonomic dysfunction
Autonomic neuropathies
cardiac autonomic
Causes of
coronavirus disease 2019
Coronaviruses
Corticosteroids
Diagnosis
Dysautonomia
Health aspects
Heart beat
Heart diseases
heart rate variability
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Men
Original Article
post-coronavirus disease
Psychological aspects
Risk factors
stress
Stress (Psychology)
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Title Cardiac Autonomic Dysfunction Measured as Reduced Heart Rate Variability, in the Intermediate Post-Covid State in Men
URI https://doi.org/10.4103/cmi.cmi_71_23
https://doaj.org/article/f36cafa4ce5a4a76bdf3feaf3607309e
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