Beat to beat variability in cardiovascular variables: noise or music?

ML Appel, RD Berger, JP Saul, JM Smith… - Journal of the American …, 1989 - Elsevier
ML Appel, RD Berger, JP Saul, JM Smith, RJ Cohen
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 1989Elsevier
Cardiovascular variables such as heart rate, arterial blood pressure, stroke volume and the
shape of electrocardiographic complexes all fluctuate on a beat to beat basis. These
fluctuations have traditionally been ignored or, at best, treated as noise to be averaged out.
The variability in cardiovascular signals reflects the homeodynamicinterplay between
perturbations to cardiovascular function and the dynamic response of the cardiovascular
regulatory systems. Modern signal processing techniques provide a means of analyzing …
Abstract
Cardiovascular variables such as heart rate, arterial blood pressure, stroke volume and the shape of electrocardiographic complexes all fluctuate on a beat to beat basis. These fluctuations have traditionally been ignored or, at best, treated as noise to be averaged out. The variability in cardiovascular signals reflects the homeodynamicinterplay between perturbations to cardiovascular function and the dynamic response of the cardiovascular regulatory systems. Modern signal processing techniques provide a means of analyzing beat to beat fluctuations in cardiovascular signals, so as to permit a quantitative, noninvasive or minimally invasive method of assessing closed loop hemodynamic regulation and cardiac electrical stability. This method promises to provide a new approach to the clinical diagnosis and management of alterations in cardiovascular regulation and stability.
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