RATIONALE: Functional reinnervation of the transplanted human heart by the autonomic nervous system has not been demonstrated. A lack of autonomic control of the transplanted allograft is reflected by an increased resting heart rate, a sluggish heart rate response to dynamical exercise and a reduced heart rate variability. Recent evidence suggests that a measure of deterministic chaos in the heartbeat interval series (point correlation dimension, PD2i) is superior to the conventional power spectrum or other stochastic measures in detecting changes in the mechanism underlying heartbeat generation. METHODS: The PD2i is based on the presumption that the variability is determined and patterned, whereas the stochastic measures all assume that th...
Key difference of the transplanted heart is its full surgical denervation which causes features of t...
International audienceIn this paper, we analyze the heart rate variability (HRV), obtained by using ...
Heart rate is not static, but rather changes continuously in response to physical and mental demands...
Objectives: Heart rate variability (HRV) is characterised by a variety of linear, non-linear, period...
Although the high-frequency fluctuations in R-R interval (respiratory sinus arrhythmia) observed in ...
It is commonly believed that higher values of heart rate variability (HRV) indices account for bette...
AbstractObjective: The first months after orthotopic heart transplantation are associated with the h...
Abstract Objective: To evaluate a possible evolutionary post-heart transplant return of autonomic f...
During the first part of exercise, heart rate increased, RR interval variance decreased, HF decrease...
BACKGROUND: Reappearance of low-frequency (LF) (+/-0.10 Hz) oscillations in RR interval (RR) after c...
SummaryBackgroundCross-sectional studies suggest, by use of heart rate variability (HRV), that parti...
Autonomic dysfunction seems to be involved in the progression and prognosis of severe congestive hea...
Variability of R-R interval and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) occurs predominantly at a l...
To evaluate heart rate variability (expressed as the standard deviation of RR intervals) within 5 ye...
2001.—Cardiovascular control is fundamentally altered after heart transplantation (HT) because of su...
Key difference of the transplanted heart is its full surgical denervation which causes features of t...
International audienceIn this paper, we analyze the heart rate variability (HRV), obtained by using ...
Heart rate is not static, but rather changes continuously in response to physical and mental demands...
Objectives: Heart rate variability (HRV) is characterised by a variety of linear, non-linear, period...
Although the high-frequency fluctuations in R-R interval (respiratory sinus arrhythmia) observed in ...
It is commonly believed that higher values of heart rate variability (HRV) indices account for bette...
AbstractObjective: The first months after orthotopic heart transplantation are associated with the h...
Abstract Objective: To evaluate a possible evolutionary post-heart transplant return of autonomic f...
During the first part of exercise, heart rate increased, RR interval variance decreased, HF decrease...
BACKGROUND: Reappearance of low-frequency (LF) (+/-0.10 Hz) oscillations in RR interval (RR) after c...
SummaryBackgroundCross-sectional studies suggest, by use of heart rate variability (HRV), that parti...
Autonomic dysfunction seems to be involved in the progression and prognosis of severe congestive hea...
Variability of R-R interval and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) occurs predominantly at a l...
To evaluate heart rate variability (expressed as the standard deviation of RR intervals) within 5 ye...
2001.—Cardiovascular control is fundamentally altered after heart transplantation (HT) because of su...
Key difference of the transplanted heart is its full surgical denervation which causes features of t...
International audienceIn this paper, we analyze the heart rate variability (HRV), obtained by using ...
Heart rate is not static, but rather changes continuously in response to physical and mental demands...