1. Heart rate variability increases with reductions in cigarette smoke exposure after 3 days.
- Author
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Munjal S, Koval T, Muhammad R, Jin Y, Demmel V, Roethig HJ, Mendes P, and Unverdorben M
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Over Studies, Electrocardiography, Ambulatory, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nicotine administration & dosage, Nicotine blood, Nicotinic Agonists administration & dosage, Nicotinic Agonists blood, Prospective Studies, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Time Factors, Autonomic Nervous System drug effects, Heart innervation, Heart Rate drug effects, Nicotine adverse effects, Nicotinic Agonists adverse effects, Smoking adverse effects, Smoking Cessation
- Abstract
Background: Smoking has been shown to influence the tone of the autonomic nervous system as reflected by heart rate variability (HRV). To date, no information is available as to whether 24-hour HRV might differentiate users of different tobacco products., Objective: To assess the differences in HRV derived from the 24-hour electrocardiogram (ECG) following the use of 2 tobacco products of potentially different exposures., Methods: Thirty adult Caucasian male smokers (mean age: 42.8 + 5.7 years) smoking 20 to 40 cigarettes/ day were randomized in a 3-way crossover study design to either smoke a conventional cigarette (CC, tar: 11 mg, Nic: 0.8 mg), to use the Electrically Heated Cigarette Smoking System (EHCSS: tar: 5 mg, Nic: 0.3 mg, according to the Federal Trade Commission [FTC]), or to stop smoking (NS) for 3 days each. The 24 hours ECGs were recorded during the last 24 hours of each exposure period., Results: A 24-hour ECG showed highest mean values for standard deviation of all normal-to-normal heart beat (NN) intervals (SDNN), standard deviation of all 5-minute averaged NN intervals in a 24-hour period (SDANN), mean of the standard deviations of the NN intervals calculated from all 5-minute segments in a 24-hour period (SDNNI), percentage (P) of all NN intervals that differ by 50 milliseconds of all NN (PNN50%), the square root of the mean of all squared differences between adjacent NN intervals in 24-hour period (RMSSD), and total number of all NN intervals divided by the height of the histogram of all NN intervals measured on a discrete scale with bins of 7 x 8125 ms (1/128 seconds; HRVTI) when participants stopped smoking followed by the use of the reduced exposure product and CC., Conclusion: Heart rate variability tended to increase with reduced smoke exposure.
- Published
- 2009
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