Publication | Open Access
A Longitudinal Description of Heart Rate Variability in 28—34-Week-Old Preterm Infants
27
Citations
39
References
2009
Year
NeonatologyPediatric Heart DiseaseEducation28—34-Week-old Preterm InfantsCongenital Heart DefectLongitudinal DescriptionEarly Life ExposureHeart PeriodsCardiologyAutonomic SystemEarly Childhood DevelopmentCardiovascular ReactivityHeart Rate VariabilityChild DevelopmentPhysiologyPediatricsSpectral AnalysisPreterm BirthMedicine
The purpose of this study was to longitudinally describe changes in heart rate variability (HRV) from 28 to 34 weeks postmenstrual age (PMA). A convenience sample of 31 low-risk preterm infants participated. HRV was quantified using a spectral analysis of heart periods and recorded during seven weekly test sessions from an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal. The total range of frequency components (0.04-2.0 Hz), high-frequency (HF) components (0.30-1.3 Hz), and ratio of low-to-high frequency (LF/HF) components (0.04-0.20/ 0.30-1.3 Hz) were measured. A mixed general linear model analysis revealed no significant change over weekly test sessions for the total, the high, and the ratio of LF/HF components. A significant interaction effect was, however, noted in the HF components for test session x gender (df = 1; F = 4.85; p = .030). With increasing age, the HF components for females increased or displayed a pattern of HRV indicative of a more mature autonomic nervous system (ANS). Study findings warrant further investigation of the impact of gender on normative descriptions of HRV.
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