Korean Circ J.  1994 Feb;24(1):17-23. 10.4070/kcj.1994.24.1.17.

Heart Rate Variability after Acute Myocardial Infarction

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Several abnormalities of the autonomic regulation of the heart have been noted after acute myocardial infarction(AMI). Measurement of heart rate(HR) variability has been reported to provide indirect, noninvasive estimate of the cardiac efferent parasympathetic activity. The purposes of this study were to get the information on heart rate variability after AMI and to determine its relation to clinical and hemodynamic data.
METHODS
We measured HR variability in 28 patients(23 men and 5 women : mean age, 56.6+/-10.4 years) 3-15days after AMI, in 25 patients with unstable angina and in 21 normal subjects by using triangular interpolation of the frequency distribution histogram om normalto-normal RR intervals from Holter tapes.
RESULTS
HR variability was lower in AMI than unstable angina patients(357.9+/-118.6 versus 426.1+/-122.5 msec : p<0.05) and normal subjects(525.1+/-137.4 msec : p<0.025). There was no difference for infarct site, thrombolytic therapy, presence of Q-wave. HR variability was significantly related to mean 24-hour HR, left ventricular ejection fraction(all p<0.0001), left ventricular end diastolic diameter(p<0.05). HR varability was lower in patients belonging to Killip class 2-4 and who reqired the use of diuretics or digitalis(all p<0.05).
CONCLUSION
After AMI, HR variabillity was reduced and significantly related to clinical and hemodynamic indexes of severity. Measurement of HR variability early after AMI may offer important clinical information for the early high stratification of patients.

Keyword

Autonomic nervous system; Acute myocardial infarction; Heart rate variability

MeSH Terms

Angina, Unstable
Autonomic Nervous System
Diuretics
Female
Heart Rate*
Heart*
Hemodynamics
Humans
Male
Myocardial Infarction*
Thrombolytic Therapy
Diuretics
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