The Clinical Significance and Application of Heart Rate Variability in Dialysis Patients: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Autonomic Imbalance and HRV in CKD Patients
3. Clinical Significance of HRV in Dialysis Patients
3.1. HRV and MetS
3.2. HRV and Malnutrition
3.3. HRV and Mortality
3.3.1. Pre-HD HRV Predicts Mortality in HD Patients
3.3.2. HRV during HD Predicts Mortality in HD Patients
3.3.3. Post-HD HRV Predicts Mortality in HD Patients
3.3.4. Change in HRV during HD Predicts Mortality in HD Patients
3.3.5. Repeated HRV Measurements Predict Mortality in HD Patients
3.3.6. The HRV Indices with Clinical Significance in HD Patients
3.3.7. HRV Predicts Mortality in PD Patients
3.4. HRV and MACE
3.5. HRV and IDH
3.6. HRV and VAF
4. Discussion
4.1. Current Clinical Significance
4.2. Other Factors Associated with HRV and Patients’ Outcomes
4.3. Future Application
4.3.1. HRV Biofeedback (HRVB)
4.3.2. Risk Stratification
4.3.3. Real-Time HRV Monitoring
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Meaning of Indices | Time Domain | Frequency Domain | Non-Linear |
---|---|---|---|
Autonomic nervous activity | SDNN | TP | SD2 |
Sympathetic activity | - | LF, LF%, nLF, * LF/HF ratio | - |
Parasympathetic activity | RMSSD, NN50 (%) | HF, HF%, nHF, VLF | SD1 |
Findings of HRV and Clinical Outcomes | Population (Number) | Clinical Interpretations | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Metabolic Syndrome | |||
[5 min ECG; 4 HRV measurements, pre-HD and in early/middle/late phases of HD] - Patients with MetS (+) had significantly lower values of several HRV indices - Patients with the FPG (+) criterion significantly influenced most HRV indices, which were more significant than the influence of MetS | HD patients (n = 175) | Higher FPG is associated with decreased autonomic, sympathetic, and parasympathetic activities in HD patients. | Chang et al. (2016) [16] |
Malnutrition | |||
[5 min ECG; 4 HRV measurements, pre-HD and in early/middle/late phases of HD] - Independently lower VLF, TP, Var, and LF% in patients with serum albumin < 3.8 g/dL - Independently higher LF% and LF/HF ratio, but lower HF% in patients with total cholesterol < 100 mg/dL - Independently higher LF% and LF/HF ratio, and lower HF and HF% in patients with body mass index < 23 kg/m2 - Independently higher HF% but lower LF% and LF/HF ratio in patients with BW loss (>10% within six months, or >5% within three months) - Independently lower HF% in patients with normalized protein catabolic rate < 1.1 g/kg BW/d | HD patients (n = 175) | The malnutrition status defined by the criteria of protein-energy wasting syndrome is associated with ANS dysfunction in HD patients. | Wu et al. (2019) [15] |
Mortality | |||
[5 min ECG; pre-HD HRV] - A higher LF/HF ratio in the pre-HD HRV measurement was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality (150 months of median follow-up) | HD patients (n = 41) | A higher sympathetic activity level before HD is associated with a higher mortality risk in HD patients. | Kuo et al. (2018) [36] |
[Average of 5 min HRV during the first hour of HD using Holter ECG] - A lower LF/HF ratio during the first hour of HD was an independent predictor for all-cause mortality (54.8 months of median follow-up) | HD patients (n = 72) | A lower sympathetic activity level during the first hour of HD is associated with higher mortality in HD patients. | Poulikakos et al. (2018) [37] |
[Holter ECG; 3 HRV measurements, pre-HD, during HD, and post-HD] - Post-HD HRV measurement, but not pre-HD or during HD HRV measurements, independently predicted all-cause mortality - Lower VLF, nLF, LF/HF ratio, and higher nHF in post-HD HRV measurement independently predicted all-cause mortality (40 months of median follow-up) | HD patients (n = 163) | A lower sympathetic activity level after HD is associated with a higher mortality risk in HD patients. | Osataphan et al. (2023) [6] |
[5 min ECG; 2 HRV measurements, pre-HD and post-HD] - ΔLF% higher than the median value was associated with a higher survival rate - Decreased ΔLF% correlated with increased all-cause and cardiovascular mortality - Adding ΔLF%-assisted prediction for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality | HD patients (n = 182) | The inability to raise sympathetic activity during HD is associated with a higher mortality risk in HD patients. | Chen et al. (2016) [38] |
[5 min ECG; 4 HRV measurements, pre-HD and in early/middle/late phases of HD] - Higher nHF and lower VLF, variance, nLF, and LF/HF ratio were independent predictors for cardiovascular mortality - Higher nHF was an independent predictor for infection-associated mortality (within the follow-up period of 96 months) | HD patients (n = 164) | A lower sympathetic activity level during HD is associated with a higher mortality risk in HD patients. | Chang et al. (2020) [7] |
[Meta-analysis] - Decreased HRV was associated with higher risks of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality - A long-term ECG recording is better than a short-term recording in predicting all-cause mortality - Decreased SDANN and LF/HF ratio were predictors of all-cause mortality - Decreased SDNN, SDANN, LF/HF ratio, and Ln LF were predictors of cardiovascular mortality | HD patients (n = 1175, from 7 studies) | Lower total autonomic nervous activity and sympathetic activity are associated with a higher mortality risk in HD patients. | Yang et al. (2020) [14] |
[5-min ECG at 0800–1000 a.m.] - Higher RMSSD, SDSD, and nHF, but lower nLF and LF/HF ratio in non-survivors than survivors - Lower LF/HF ratio was an independent predictor of all-cause mortality (within the follow-up period of 43.8 months) | PD patients (n = 81) | A lower sympathetic activity level is associated with a higher mortality rate for PD patients. | Pei et al. (2015) [39] |
[24 h Holter ECG] - Decreased DFAα1 was a strong predictor for cardiac and total mortality (34 months of median follow-up) | PD patients (n = 132) | Lower sympathetic activity with higher vagal activity is associated with higher cardiac and all-cause mortality in PD patients. | Chiang et al. (2016) [9] |
Major adverse cardiovascular events | |||
[24 h Holter ECG; pre-HD HRV] - Lower SDNN and SDANN were associated with higher MACE development and lower MACE-free survival rates - Lower SDNN was an independent predictor for MACE development (in non-diabetic patients, but not diabetic patients) (32 months of mean follow-up) | HD patients (n = 90) | A lower ANS activity level is associated with a higher MACE risk. | Kida et al. (2017) [40] |
[5 min ECG, pre-HD HRV] - Kaplan–Meier curves found decreasing MACE-free survival rates in the patients with lower VLF levels - A low VLF activity level was an independent predictor for MACE and hospitalization (33 months of mean follow-up) | HD patients (n = 179) | A lower cardiac response toward external stress at the pre-HD stage is associated with a higher MACE risk. | Huang et al. (2017) [21] |
[Average of 5 min HRV during the first hour of HD using Holter ECG] - A lower LF/HF ratio during the first hour of HD was an independent predictor for MACE (54.8 months of median follow-up) | HD patients (n = 72) | Lower sympathetic activity during the first hour of HD is associated with a higher MACE risk in HD patients | Poulikakos et al. [37] |
Intradialytic hypotension | |||
[5 min ECG; 4 HRV measurements, pre-HD and in early/middle/late phases of HD] - The patients with IDH had statistically lower levels of many HRV indices since the middle phase of HD - By logistic regression analysis, a higher LF/HF ratio and lower variance at HD initiation were independently associated with IDH | HD patients (n = 171) | A lower sympathetic activity level at an early stage of HD predicted a higher risk of IDH. | Chang et al. (2016) [22] |
[5 min ECG; 3 HRV measurements, in early/middle/late phases of HD] - The changes of many HRV indices between the early and middle phases of HD (ΔHRV) were independent predictors for IDH within the following month. - The ΔHRV variables significantly improved the predictive performance of a multivariate model, and IDH could be predicted by adding to this model | HD patients (n = 71) | A minor increase in ANS activity during HD is associated with a higher IDH risk within the coming month. | Park et al. (2019) [41] |
[Holter ECG; in non-HD phase, from post-HD to next pre-HD] - VLF and HF were significantly lower in the IDH group - HRV-IDH ≥ 0.544 was an independent factor for IDH (odds ratio 6.14, p = 0.11) | HD patients (n = 70) | ANS dysfunction determined by the HRV-IDH index is an independent risk factor for IDH. | Park et al. (2024) [42] |
Vascular Access Failure | |||
[5 min ECG; 4 HRV measurements, pre-HD and in early/middle/late phases of HD] - A lower LF/HF ratio and higher nHF occurred in patients with VAF than those without VAF - LF/HF ratio and nHF were two independent indicators for VAF | HD patients (n = 175) | Lower and higher sympathetic activity is associated with VAF in the arteriovenous fistula and Hickman’s catheter, respectively. | Huang et al. (2017) [19] |
HRV Indices | Mortality | MACE | IDH | VAF |
---|---|---|---|---|
nLF | Post-HD nLF↓, mortality↑ [6] During HD nLF↓, CV mortality↑ [7] | - | - | - |
ΔLF% | ΔLF% > 5.1 nu, mortality↓ ΔLF%↓, mortality↑ [38] | - | - | - |
VLF | Post-HD VLF↓, mortality↑ [6] Pre-HD VLF↓, CV mortality↑ [7] | VLF↓, MACE↑ [6] | Post-HD VLF↓, IDH↑ [42] | - |
HF | Post-HD HF↑, HD mortality↑ [6] | - | Post-HD VLF↓, HF↑ [42] | - |
nHF | post-HD nHF↑, mortality↑ [6] During HD nHF↑, CV mortality↑ [7] During HD nHF↑, infection mortality↑ [7] | - | - | During HD nHF↑, VAF↑ [19] |
LF/HF ratio | Pre-HD LF/HF ratio↑, mortality↑ [36] Post-HD LF/HF ratio↓, mortality↑ [6] During HD LF/HF ratio↓, CV mortality↑ [7] During HD LF/HF ratio↓, mortality↑ [37] | During HD LF/HF ratio↓, MACE↑ [37] | LF/HF↑, IDH↑ at the beginning of HD [22] | LF/HF↓, VAF↑ [19] |
SDNN | - | SDNN↓, MACE↑ [40] | - | - |
Variance | Variance↓, CV mortality↑ [7] | - | Variance↓, IDH↑ at the beginning of HD [22] | - |
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Jhen, R.-N.; Wang, P.-C.; Chang, Y.-M.; Kao, J.-L.; Wu, E.C.-H.; Shiao, C.-C. The Clinical Significance and Application of Heart Rate Variability in Dialysis Patients: A Narrative Review. Biomedicines 2024, 12, 1547. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12071547
Jhen R-N, Wang P-C, Chang Y-M, Kao J-L, Wu EC-H, Shiao C-C. The Clinical Significance and Application of Heart Rate Variability in Dialysis Patients: A Narrative Review. Biomedicines. 2024; 12(7):1547. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12071547
Chicago/Turabian StyleJhen, Rong-Na, Ping-Chen Wang, Yu-Ming Chang, Jsun-Liang Kao, Eric Chien-Hwa Wu, and Chih-Chung Shiao. 2024. "The Clinical Significance and Application of Heart Rate Variability in Dialysis Patients: A Narrative Review" Biomedicines 12, no. 7: 1547. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12071547
APA StyleJhen, R. -N., Wang, P. -C., Chang, Y. -M., Kao, J. -L., Wu, E. C. -H., & Shiao, C. -C. (2024). The Clinical Significance and Application of Heart Rate Variability in Dialysis Patients: A Narrative Review. Biomedicines, 12(7), 1547. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12071547