Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9004455 | Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
An intermediate-term fractal-like scaling exponent of RR intervals was a better predictor of death than the traditional measures of HR variability in elderly community-dwelling people. It is noteworthy that the longer-term (alpha 2) rather than the short-term fractal component (alpha 1) showed predictive value for all-cause mortality, which suggests that an increase in the randomness of intermediate-term HR behavior may be a specific marker of neurohumoral and sympathetic activation and therefore may also be associated with an increased risk of mortality.
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Authors
N. Hotta, K. Otsuka, S. Murakami, G. Yamanaka, Y. Kubo, O. Matsuoka, T. Yamanaka, M. Shinagawa, S. Nunoda, Y. Nishimura, K. Shibata, H. Saitoh, M. Nishinaga, M. Ishine, T. Wada, K. Okumiya, K. Matsubayashi, S. Yano, F. Halberg,