Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Heart rate variability" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Child and marital stress are associated with a psychophysiological index of self-regulatory capacities among parents of preschool children MacNeil S; da Estrela C; Caldwell W; Gouin JP; 40972822
PERFORM
2 Adiposity and cardiac autonomic function in children with a family history of obesity Saade MB; Holden S; Kakinami L; McGrath JJ; Mathieu MÈ; Poirier P; Barnett TA; Beaucage P; Henderson M; 39304555
PERFORM
3 Predicting response to stepped-care cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia using pre-treatment heart rate variability in cancer patients Garneau J; Savard J; Dang-Vu TT; Gouin JP; 38991424
HKAP
4 High-frequency heart rate variability during worry predicts stress-related increases in sleep disturbances Gouin JP; Wenzel K; Boucetta S; O' Byrne J; Salimi A; Dang-Vu TT; 25819418
PERFORM
5 The effects of acute exercise and a nap on heart rate variability and memory in young sedentary adults Mograss M; Frimpong E; Vilcourt F; Chouchou F; Zvionow T; Dang-Vu TT; 37855092
PERFORM
6 Respiratory sinus arrhythmia moderates the interpersonal consequences of brooding rumination Caldwell W; MacNeil S; Wrosch C; McGrath JJ; Dang-Vu TT; Morin AJS; Gouin JP; 36844897
HKAP
7 Heart rate variability moderates the between- and within-person associations between daily stress and negative affect da Estrela C; MacNeil S; Gouin JP; 33556470
PERFORM
8 PASS: A Multimodal Database of Physical Activity and Stress for Mobile Passive Body/ Brain-Computer Interface Research Parent M; Albuquerque I; Tiwari A; Cassani R; Gagnon JF; Lafond D; Tremblay S; Falk TH; 33363449
PERFORM
9 Heart Rate Variability, Sleep Quality, and Depression in the Context of Chronic Stress da Estrela C; McGrath J; Booij L; Gouin JP; 32525208
PERFORM
10 The Neuroscience of Sadness: A Multidisciplinary Synthesis and Collaborative Review for the Human Affectome Project. Arias JA, Williams C, Raghvani R, Aghajani M, Baez S, Belzung C, Booij L, Busatto G, Chiarella J, Fu CH, Ibanez A, Liddell BJ, Lowe L, Penninx BWJH, Rosa P, Kemp AH 32001274
PSYCHOLOGY
11 High-Frequency Heart Rate Variability Reactivity and Trait Worry Interact to Predict the Development of Sleep Disturbances in Response to a Naturalistic Stressor. MacNeil S, Deschênes SS, Caldwell W, Brouillard M, Dang-Vu TT, Gouin JP 28527014
PERFORM

 

Title:Heart Rate Variability, Sleep Quality, and Depression in the Context of Chronic Stress
Authors:da Estrela CMcGrath JBooij LGouin JP
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32525208/
DOI:10.1093/abm/kaaa039
Publication:Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine
Keywords:Chronic stressDepressionHigh-frequency heart rate variabilityRespiratory sinus arrhythmiaSleep reactivity
PMID:32525208 Category: Date Added:2020-06-11
Dept Affiliation: PERFORM
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada.
2 Center for Clinical Research in Health, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada.
3 PERFORM Center, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada.

Description:

Background: Disrupted sleep quality is one of the proposed mechanisms through which chronic stress may lead to depression. However, there exist significant individual differences in sleep reactivity, which is the extent to which one experiences sleep disturbances in response to stress.

Purpose: The aim of the current study was to investigate whether low high-frequency heart rate variability (HRV), as a psychophysiological marker of poor emotional and physiological arousal regulation, predicts stress-related sleep disturbances associated with greater risk of depression symptoms.

Methods: Using a chronic caregiving stress model, 125 mothers of adolescents with developmental disorders and 97 mothers of typically developing adolescents had their resting HRV and HRV reactivity recorded and completed a measure of depressive symptoms, as well as a 7 day sleep diary to assess their sleep quality. A moderated mediation model tested whether sleep quality mediated the association between chronic stress exposure and depressive symptoms and whether HRV moderated this mediation.

Results: After controlling for participant age, body mass index, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and employment status, poor sleep quality mediated the association between chronic stress and depressive symptoms. Resting HRV moderated this indirect effect such that individuals with lower HRV were more likely to report poorer sleep quality in the context of chronic stressor exposure, which, in turn, was related to greater depressive symptoms.

Conclusions: Lower HRV, a potential biomarker of increased sleep reactivity to stress, is associated with greater vulnerability to stress-related sleep disturbances, which, in turn, increases the risk for elevated depressive symptoms in response to chronic stress.





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