1. Ambulatory measurement of the ECG T-wave amplitude
- Author
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Melanie Neijts, Gonneke Willemsen, René van Lien, and Eco J. C. de Geus
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,education ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Sitting ,T wave amplitude ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Nighttime sleep ,Internal medicine ,Mental stress ,Heart rate ,Ambulatory ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Cardiology ,sense organs ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Psychology ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Ambulatory recording of the preejection period (PEP) can be used to measure changes in cardiac sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity under naturalistic conditions. Here, we test the ECG T-wave amplitude (TWA) as an alternative measure, using 24-h ambulatory monitoring of PEP and TWA in a sample of 564 healthy adults. The TWA showed a decrease in response to mental stress and a monotonic decrease from nighttime sleep to daytime sitting and more physically active behaviors. Within-participant changes in TWA were correlated with changes in the PEP across the standardized stressors (r = .42) and the unstandardized naturalistic conditions (mean r = .35). Partialling out changes in heart rate and vagal effects attenuated these correlations, but they remained significant. Ambulatory TWA cannot replace PEP, but simultaneous recording of TWA and PEP provides a more comprehensive picture of changes in cardiac SNS activity in real-life settings.
- Published
- 2014
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