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Effect of spontaneous saliva swallowing on short‐term heart rate variability (HRV) and reliability of HRV analysis
Author(s) -
Yildiz Metin,
Doma Serian
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
clinical physiology and functional imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.608
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1475-097X
pISSN - 1475-0961
DOI - 10.1111/cpf.12475
Subject(s) - heart rate variability , swallowing , medicine , intraclass correlation , saliva , cardiology , heart rate , anesthesia , audiology , surgery , blood pressure , psychometrics , clinical psychology
Summary The effects of effortful swallowing and solid meal ingestions on heart rate variability ( HRV ) have been examined previously. The effects of spontaneous saliva swallowing on short‐term HRV and reliability of HRV analysis have not been studied before. The effect of saliva swallowing on HRV analyses parameters [mean RRI , SDNN (standard deviation of normal‐to‐normal), LF (low frequency), HF (high frequency) powers, LH / HF ] and the reliability of LF and HF powers were investigated by frequency, time–frequency and intraclass correlation coefficient ( ICC ) analyses. Electrocardiogram and swallowing signal that obtained from an electronic stethoscope placed on the necks of subjects were recorded simultaneously from 30 healthy and young volunteers in sitting position during 15 min. Spontaneous swallowing has been shown to significantly alter some HRV parameters ( SDNN , LF power and LF / HF ratio). Time‐frequency analysis results showed that the contribution of saliva swallowing to LF (1–58%) and HF (2–42%) powers could change significantly depending on the number of swallowing. The ICC of the LF and HF powers for the successive 5‐min signal segments were found 0·89, 0·92, respectively. These values decreased to 0·73 and 0·90 in the subjects with more swallowing rate. When the analyses were made for 2‐min signal periods, these values decreased to 0·63 and 0·67. We concluded that spontaneous saliva swallowing can change HRV parameters. We have also seen that changes in swallowing rate and use of short signal segments may reduce the reliability of HRV analyses.