Heartbeat and breathing cycles can become synchronized, a new study
shows. Looking for patterns in the sequence of human heartbeats is
a much studied subject; evidence for pattern-revealing
characteristics such as chaos and fractal or spiral geometry have
been sought. Breathing, which is more under direct conscious
control than heartbeat, is much less studied.
Part of the problem
with searching for a breathing-heartbeat correlation is that these
systems have very different rhythms. The heart normally beats 60 to
70 times per minute, while the breathing rate is about one-fifth of
that. Furthermore, the heart and breathing phenomena are complex;
consequently at least for periods of awakeness or rapid-eye-movement
(REM) sleep little or no phase synchrony (that is, breathing and
heartbeat recurring with a consistent relation to each other) can be
found. However, solid evidence has now been found for a
breathing-heartbeat correlation for periods of deep sleep.
Some signs of phase synchrony have been found before, but only in
small samples of a dozen or so subjects. By contrast, the study
performed by scientists at Bar-Ilan University (Israel), and the
Martin-Luther University and the Philipps University (both in
Germany), includes 112
healthy subjects of varying ages, men and women, for a variety of
sleep stages. The researchers conclude, for one thing, that the
breathing rate affects the heart rate but not the other way around.
Both the breathing oscillation and heartbeat oscillation are
disturbed by the kinds of
noise superimposed by higher brain activity present, such as in REM
sleep.
Jan Kantelhardt (jan.kantelhardt@physik.uni-halle.de,
+49-345-55254-33) is sure enough of the heart-breathing correlation
that he believes the sleep stages could now be determined by
measuring heartbeat rather than measuring brain waves. The
researchers are also hoping to establish careful heart-breathing
correlations for patients with heart problems, the better to develop
diagnostic devices.
Bartsch et al., Physical Review Letters,
2 February 2007
Contact Jan Kantelhardt
Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
jan.kantelhardt@physik.uni-halle.de
+49-345-55254-33