Publications by authors named "Visnovcova N"

Article Synopsis
  • Listening to music can help reduce stress and improve heart rate variability (HRV) in healthy young adults, although therapists have differing opinions on its effectiveness.
  • The study involved 30 participants who listened to different frequencies of passive music therapy and had their heart response measured to assess relaxation effects.
  • Results indicated that higher frequency music significantly improved heart's response and was subjectively perceived as more pleasant compared to silence, suggesting that music can positively calm the human body.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mobile wireless communication technologies have now become an everyday part of our lives, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Monitoring the autonomous system under exposition to electromagnetic fields may play an important role in broading of our still limited knowledge on their effect on human body. Thus, we studied the interaction of the high frequency electromagnetic field (HF EMF) with living body and its effect on the autonomic control of heart rate using Heart Rate Variability (HRV) linear and nonlinear analyses in healthy volunteers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is an index of cardiovagal regulation, emotional and cognitive processing. RSA is quantified using heart rate variability (HRV) spectral analysis at respiratory-linked high-frequency band (HF-HRV) using Fast Fourier transformation (FFT) or autoregressive (AR) method, both requiring resampling of recordings - a potential source of error. We hypothesized that rarely used HRV time-frequency analysis with Lomb-Scargle periodogram (LSP) without resampling could be more sensitive to detect neurocardiac response to posture change than FFT and AR.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effect of volume-related feedback and output airflow resistance on the cough motor pattern was studied in 17 pentobarbital anesthetized spontaneously-breathing cats. Lung inflation during tracheobronchial cough was ventilator controlled and triggered by the diaphragm electromyographic (EMG) signal. Altered lung inflations during cough resulted in modified cough motor drive and temporal features of coughing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of microinjections of the excitatory neurotoxin kainic acid (2 mg/ml; 49 ± 1 nl) on the mechanically induced tracheobronchial cough, sneeze, and solitary expulsions from the trachea were examined in 11 anesthetized rabbits. Kainic acid was injected into the medulla (1.6-2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to determine if a codeine-sensitive control system for cough exists in the medullary raphé four microinjections of codeine (3.3 and 16.5 mM; 36.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of nasopharyngeal stimulation on excitability and rhythmicity of mechanically induced tracheobronchial cough were examined on 18 pentobarbitone anesthetized cats. After the 17.2+/-2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aspiration reflexes (AspRs) manifesting as reflex spasmodic inspirations and their effects on motor pattern of tracheobronchial cough and reflex apnea were studied on 22 spontaneously breathing pentobarbitone-anesthetized cats. AspRs induced during cough inspiration enhanced peak inspiratory (P<0.01) and expiratory (P<0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of kainic acid lesions in the medullary raphe midline on reflex expirations induced mechanically from the trachea were examined. Spontaneously breathing rabbits were anesthetized by ketamine and xylazine i.m.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF