DocumentCode :
1148594
Title :
Stratification Pattern of Static and Scale-Invariant Dynamic Measures of Heartbeat Fluctuations Across Sleep Stages in Young and Elderly
Author :
Schmitt, Daniel T. ; Stein, Phyllis K. ; Ivanov, Plamen Ch
Author_Institution :
Theor. Phys., Univ. Ulm, Ulm
Volume :
56
Issue :
5
fYear :
2009
fDate :
5/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1564
Lastpage :
1573
Abstract :
Cardiac dynamics exhibit complex variability characterized by scale-invariant and nonlinear temporal organization related to the mechanism of neuroautonomic control, which changes with physiologic states and pathologic conditions. Changes in sleep regulation during sleep stages are also related to fluctuations in autonomic nervous activity. However, the interaction between sleep regulation and cardiac autonomic control remains not well understood. Even less is known how this interaction changes with age, as aspects of both cardiac dynamics and sleep regulation differ in healthy elderly compared to young subjects. We hypothesize that because of the neuroautonomic responsiveness in young subjects, fractal and nonlinear features of cardiac dynamics exhibit a pronounced stratification pattern across sleep stages, while in elderly these features will remain unchanged due to age-related loss of cardiac variability and decline of neuroautonomic responsiveness. We analyze the variability and the temporal fractal organization of heartbeat fluctuations across sleep stages in both young and elderly. We find that independent linear and nonlinear measures of cardiac control consistently exhibit the same ordering in their values across sleep stages, forming a robust stratification pattern. Despite changes in sleep architecture and reduced heart rate variability in elderly subjects, this stratification surprisingly does not break down with advanced age. Moreover, the difference between sleep stages for some linear, fractal, and nonlinear measures exceeds the difference between young and elderly, suggesting that the effect of sleep regulation on cardiac dynamics is significantly stronger than the effect of healthy aging. Quantifying changes in this stratification pattern may provide insights into how alterations in sleep regulation contribute to increased cardiac risk.
Keywords :
biocontrol; electrocardiography; electroencephalography; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; sleep; autonomic nervous activity; cardiac control; cardiac dynamics; heart rate variability; heartbeat fluctuations; neuroautonomic control; scale-invariant dynamic measures; sleep regulation; sleep stages; static dynamic measures; stratification pattern; temporal fractal organization; Aging; Delay; Fluctuations; Fractals; Heart beat; Heart rate variability; Physics; Polymers; Senior citizens; Sleep; USA Councils; Aging; cardiac dynamics; detrended fluctuations; fractal; nonlinear; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Aging; Female; Fractals; Heart; Heart Rate; Humans; Linear Models; Male; Models, Statistical; Multivariate Analysis; Myocardial Contraction; Nonlinear Dynamics; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Sleep Stages;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2009.2014819
Filename :
4776481
Link To Document :
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