Decrements in Adolescent Cardiac Complexity During Mother-Adolescent Conflicts.

Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback

University Research Institute On Health Sciences (IUNICS), University of the Balearic Islands, Ctra. de Valldemossa, km. 7.5Mallorca, 07122, Palma, Spain.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates non-linear cardiac measures, such as scale-invariant self-similarity and entropy, alongside traditional heart rate variability (HRV), in 55 healthy adolescents during positive and negative interactions with their mothers.
  • Results revealed significant changes in cardiac complexity during stressful interactions, suggesting that adolescents' heart rate responses become less complex when facing negative situations.
  • Although sex differences were explored, no significant effects were found, although trends indicated lower cardiac scaling in females compared to males, highlighting the need for further research on sex differences in cardiac responses.

Article Abstract

The present study aimed to provide further evidence on the usefulness of non-linear cardiac measures when examining the output of the cardiac system. Scale-invariant self-similarity and entropy, in addition to heart rate variability (HRV) given by time- and frequency-domain measures were calculated in a sample of N = 55 healthy adolescents (M = 14.122, SD = 0.698) during 10-min positive (non-stressful) and negative (stressful) interactions with their mothers. We also explored sex influence in adolescents' cardiac output using both HRV measures and non-linear cardiac measures. Repeated measures MANOVA revealed a marginal within-group effect for HRV measures, F(3,51) = 2.438, p = 0.075, η = 0.125), and a significant within-group effect for non-linear cardiac measures, F(6, 48) = 3.296, p = 0.009, η = 0.292, showing a significant decrement in adolescents' cardiac complexity during the negative interaction. No significant effect for sex was found in either non-linear cardiac measures or HRV measures, but results suggest lower cardiac scaling in females than in males. These findings suggest a real-time scale predominance in heart rate output when adolescents face an aversive situation and support the importance of non-linear cardiac measures to gain insight into the cardiac system and its regulatory mechanisms. Further research is needed to examine sex-differences in cardiac complexity during aversive situations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10484-021-09513-3DOI Listing

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