The Case for a Limits of Agreement (LoA) Criterion for Ultra-Short-Term (UST) HRV Measurements
The majority of ultra-short-term (UST) heart rate variability (HRV) norm studies have utilized correlations to determine whether brief samples can approximate 5-min resting baseline measurements. The present study compared the two approaches with resting UST HRV time-domain, frequency-domain, and nonlinear measurements. A Thought Technology ProComp™ Infiniti system monitored ECG and respiration. Subjects were stabilized for 5-min and then monitored for 7 min sitting upright, with eyes open, no feedback, and instructions to breathe normally. The investigators extracted 10-, 20-, 30-, 60-, 90-, 120-, 180-, and 240-s segments from 5-min resting ECG recordings of 38 healthy undergraduates ages 18 to 23. A comparison of Pearson Product-Moment Correlation (r ≥ 0.90) and a LoA analysis (allowable difference = ± 5% of the range) showed that these approaches agreed on the minimum sample required to estimate 5-min HR, SDNN, LF (nu and power), HF (nu and power), LF/HF, DFalpha2, DET, SD2, and ShanEn.
Keywords: Heart Rate Variability , Respiration, Biofeedback, Psychophysiology, Statistics , Limits of agreement , ultra short term, measurements
Topic(s):Psychology
Biology
Statistics
Presentation Type: Poster
Session: 7-10
Location: GEO - SUB
Time: 3:30