The role of heart rate variability, heart rate turbulence, and deceleration capacity in predicting cause-specific mortality in chronic heart failure

Salah S Al-Zaiti, Grzegorz Pietrasik, Mary G Carey, Mohammad Alhamaydeh, John M Canty, James A Fallavollita, Salah S Al-Zaiti, Grzegorz Pietrasik, Mary G Carey, Mohammad Alhamaydeh, John M Canty, James A Fallavollita

Abstract

Background: The volume of regional denervated myocardium (D-M) on positron emission tomography has been recently suggested as a strong independent predictor of cause-specific mortality from sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) in chronic heart failure. We sought to evaluate whether ECG indices of global autonomic function predict risk of SCA to a similar degree as regional D-M.

Methods: Subjects enrolled in the Prediction of Arrhythmic Events using Positron Emission Tomography (PAREPET) study were included in this study. Patients completed a 24-hour Holter ECG at enrollment and were followed up at 3-month intervals. SCA events were adjudicated by two board-certified cardiologists. Other cardiovascular death events were classified as nonsudden cardiac death (NSCD). Eight measures of heart rate variability were analyzed: SDNN, RMSSD, low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) power, heart rate turbulence onset and slope, and acceleration and deceleration capacity. We used competing risk regression to delineate cause-specific mortality from SCA versus NSCD.

Results: Our sample included 127 patients (age 67 ± 12, 92% male). After a median follow-up of 4.1 years, there were 22 (17%) adjudicated SCA and 18 (14%) adjudicated NSCD events. In multivariate Cox-regression, LF power was the only HRV parameter to predict time-to-SCA. However, in competing risk analysis, reduced LF power was preferentially associated with NSCD rather than SCA (HR = 0.92 [0.85-0.98], p = 0.019).

Conclusion: Depressed LF power might indicate impaired vagal reflex, which suggests that increasing vagal tone in these patients would have a protective effect against NSCD beyond that achieved by the mere slowing of heart rate using β-blockers.

Keywords: Cardiovascular death; Deceleration capacity; Heart failure; Heart rate turbulence; Heart rate variability; Sudden cardiac arrest.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Kaplan-Meier events probability curve. This figure illustrates that tertiles of LF power are preferentially associated with non-sudden cardiac death but not sudden cardiac arrest (p values based on competing risk analysis). Those with depressed LF power have the highest rate of events during follow up period.

Source: PubMed

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