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Effects of smoking status, history and intensity on heart rate variability in the general population: The CHRIS study

Authors :
Benedetta Maria Motta
Martin Gögele
Cristian Pattaro
Daniel Sinnecker
Roberto Melotti
Federico Murgia
Alessandra Rossini
Luisa Foco
Michael Toifl
Alexander Steger
Georg Schmidt
Alexander Müller
Giampiero Merati
Peter P. Pramstaller
Viviana Meraviglia
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 4, p e0215053 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundHeart rate variability (HRV) reflects the autonomous nervous system modulation on heart rate and is associated with several pathologies, including cardiac mortality. While mechanistic studies show that smoking is associated with lower HRV, population-based studies present conflicting results.MethodsWe assessed the mutual effects of active smoking status, cumulative smoking history, and current smoking intensity, on HRV among 4751 adults from the Cooperative Health Research In South Tyrol (CHRIS) study. The HRV metrics standard deviation of normal-to-normal (NN) inter-beat intervals (SDNN), square root of the mean squared differences of consecutive NN intervals (RMSSD), total power (TP), low (LF) and high frequency (HF) power, and their ratio (LF/HF), were derived from 20-minute electrocardiograms. Smoking status, pack-years (PY), and tobacco grams/day from standardized questionnaires were the main exposures. We fitted linear mixed models to account for relatedness, non-linearity, and moderating effects, and including fractional polynomials.ResultsPast smokers had higher HRV levels than never smokers, independently of PY. The association of HRV with current smoking became apparent when accounting for the interaction between smoking status and PY. In current smokers, but not in past smokers, we observed HRV reductions between 2.0% (SDNN) and 4.9% (TP) every 5 PY increase. Furthermore, current smokers were characterized by dose-response reductions of 9.8% (SDNN), 8.9% (RMSSD), 20.1% (TP), 17.7% (LF), and 19.1% (HF), respectively, every 10 grams/day of smoked tobacco, independently of common cardiometabolic conditions and HRV-modifying drugs. The LF/HF ratio was not associated with smoking status, history, or intensity.ConclusionsSmoking cessation was associated with higher HRV levels. In current smokers, heavier smoking intensity appears gradually detrimental on HRV, corroborating previous evidence. By affecting both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system indexes, but not the LF/HF balance, smoking intensity seems to exert a systemic dysautonomic effect.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
14
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....80b7e3eb36b6a2adeedbdc8f409f3096