A call to reevaluate cardiac autonomic assessment after spinal cord injury

American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Hisham SharifDavid S Ditor

Abstract

This "Perspectives" article puts forward the notion that measuring heart rate variability, or other forms of cardiac autonomic regulation, after spinal cord injury must be performed during a test of autonomic stress. Resting values of heart rate variability are often similar to those obtained from able-bodied individuals, which may therefore be falsely interpreted as normal or healthy autonomic regulation. However, evidence shows that despite normal resting values, cardiac autonomic control is impaired when individual with spinal cord injury are subjected to a cold face test, head-up tilt, or recovery from exercise. Accordingly, examination of cardiac autonomic function must be performed during an autonomic challenge, as resting measures do not accurately reflect the state of cardiovascular regulation after spinal cord injury and can provide false information.

References

Feb 1, 1997·The American Journal of Physiology·D R GrimmW A Bauman
Sep 15, 2000·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·Y H WangY Z Tseng
Jul 11, 2006·Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise·Jill M WechtRonald E De Meersman
Oct 27, 2006·Clinical Autonomic Research : Official Journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society·Jill M WechtWilliam A Bauman
Nov 21, 2007·American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology·Victoria E Claydon, Andrei V Krassioukov
May 7, 2009·Clinical Autonomic Research : Official Journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society·Jill M WechtWilliam A Bauman
Feb 1, 2011·Clinical Autonomic Research : Official Journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society·Faisal RahmanDavid S Goldstein
Oct 27, 2012·Handbook of Clinical Neurology·Lynne C WeaverAndrei V Krassioukov
Feb 23, 2013·Frontiers in Physiology·George E Billman

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Antifungals (ASM)

An antifungal, also known as an antimycotic medication, is a pharmaceutical fungicide or fungistatic used to treat and prevent mycosis such as athlete's foot, ringworm, candidiasis, cryptococcal meningitis, and others. Discover the latest research on antifungals here.

Antifungals

An antifungal, also known as an antimycotic medication, is a pharmaceutical fungicide or fungistatic used to treat and prevent mycosis such as athlete's foot, ringworm, candidiasis, cryptococcal meningitis, and others. Discover the latest research on antifungals here.