Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2847671 Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Cardiorespiratory variability is the product of the integration of centrally generated rhythms with feedback from central and peripheral sensors. To quantify the effect of increased central drive on scaling patterns of cardiorespiratory activity, breath-to-breath interval (BBI) and heartbeat-to-heartbeat interval (RRI) were recorded from 17 female and 17 male adult subjects at rest and at two levels of mild exercise. Temporal scaling of BBI and RRI was quantified with detrended fluctuation analysis. Relative to a resting state, exercise induced a decrease in the short-term scaling of BBI (p = 0.022), an increase in the long-term scaling of RRI (p = 0.006), and abolished a significant positive linear relationship in females subjects (p = 0.024) and a significant negative relationship in male subjects (p = 0.025) in the short-term scaling of BBI and RRI. In conclusion, exercise has opposing effects on the control of breathing and heart rate, and modulates a divergent gender-based coupling of the temporal scaling of cardiorespiratory function.

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