Changes in heart rate variability during an eHealth behavior change intervention program in patients with cardiovascular disease.

Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc

Department of Medical and Clinical Psychology, Center of Research on Psychological Disorders and Somatic Diseases (CoRPS), Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands.

Published: December 2024

Background: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk is associated with health behaviors such as physical inactivity, dietary habits, and smoking. The autonomic nervous system plays a key role in this association. The present longitudinal study examines whether ECG-based indices of autonomic nervous system activity change during an eHealth-based behavior intervention program and assesses whether improvements in health behaviors are associated with increases in parasympathetic autonomic nervous system activity.

Methods: Data from the DoCHANGE-2 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03178305) eHealth-based behavior intervention study in patients with CVD were analyzed for participants with valid ECG recordings (N = 58, mean age = 58.9 [SD = 12.7] years, 21 % women). Heart rate variability (indexed as RMSSD) was calculated from home-recorded (40 s) ECGs over 5-day periods at baseline, 3, and 6 months. Health behaviors, clinical, and psychosocial information was obtained from questionnaires and medical records. Data were analyzed using linear mixed models and general linear models.

Results: Over the 6-month period, RMSSD decreased significantly, with the lowest values at six months (B = -19.336 [95 %CI -36.291; 2.381], p = 0.026). Health behaviors improved significantly during the active (0-3 months) intervention period (B = 13.360 [95 %CI 6.931 19.789], p < 0.001). Higher BMI (B = -0.369 [-0.739; 0.000]; p = 0.05) and older age (B = -0.404 [95 % CI -0.597; - 0.211]; p < 0.001) were associated with lower RMSSD across the three timepoints. No consistent associations were found between changes in health behaviors and changes in RMSSD.

Conclusion: This study shows that changes in HRV during an eHealth-based behavioral intervention were not associated with the observed improvements in health behaviors. These findings require replication in larger well-controlled investigations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11625173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcha.2024.101563DOI Listing

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