Do Longer Exhalations Increase HRV During Slow-Paced Breathing?

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Zachary M. Meehan, Fred Shaffer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Slow-paced breathing at an individual’s resonance frequency (RF) is a common element of heart rate variability (HRV) biofeedback training (Laborde et al. in Psychophysiology 59:e13952, 2022). Although there is strong empirical support for teaching clients to slow their respiration rate (RR) to the adult RF range between 4.5 and 6.5 bpm (Lehrer & Gevirtz, 2014), there have been no definitive findings regarding the best inhalation-to-exhalation (IE) ratio to increase HRV when breathing within this range. Three methodological challenges have frustrated previous studies: ensuring participants breathed at the target RR, IE ratio, and the same RR during each IE ratio. The reviewed studies disagreed regarding the effect of IE ratios. Three studies found no IE ratio effect (Cappo & Holmes in J Psychosom Res 28:265-273, 1984; Edmonds et al. in Biofeedback 37:141-146, 2009; Klintworth et al. in Physiol Meas 33:1717-1731, 2012). One reported an advantage for equal inhalations and exhalations (Lin et al. in Int J Psychophysiol 91:206?211, 2014). Four studies observed an advantage for longer exhalations than inhalations (Bae et al. in Psychophysiology 58:e13905, 2021; Laborde et al. in Sustainability 13:7775, 2021; Strauss-Blasche et al. in Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol 27:601?60, 2000; Van Diest et al. in Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback 39:171?180, 2014). One study reported an advantage for longer inhalations than exhalations (Paprika et al. in Acta Physiol Hung 101:273?281, 2014). We conducted original (N = 26) and replication (N = 16) studies to determine whether a 1:2 IE ratio produces different HRV time-domain, frequency-domain, or nonlinear metrics than a 1:1 ratio when breathing at 6 bpm. Our original study found that IE ratio did not affect HRV time- and frequency-domain metrics. The replication study confirmed these results and found no effect on HRV nonlinear measurements.

Abstract Image

在慢节奏呼吸时,呼气时间长会增加心率变异吗?
以个人的共振频率(RF)进行慢节奏呼吸是心率变异性(HRV)生物反馈训练的一个常见要素(Laborde 等人,发表于《心理生理学》59:e13952,2022 年)。尽管经验证明,教客户将呼吸频率(RR)减慢到成人 RF 范围 4.5 至 6.5 bpm 之间(Lehrer & Gevirtz,2014 年)是非常有必要的,但关于在此范围内呼吸时提高心率变异性的最佳吸气呼气(IE)比率,还没有明确的研究结果。之前的研究在方法上遇到了三个挑战:确保参与者以目标呼吸频率、IE 比值以及在每个 IE 比值期间以相同的呼吸频率进行呼吸。关于 IE 比值的影响,已审查的研究意见不一。三项研究发现 IE 比率没有影响(Cappo 和 Holmes,载于《J Psychosom Res》28:265-273,1984 年;Edmonds 等人,载于《Biofeedback》37:141-146,2009 年;Klintworth 等人,载于《Physiol Meas》33:1717-1731,2012 年)。有一项研究报告了等量吸气和呼气的优势(Lin 等人,载于 Int J Psychophysiol 91:206?211, 2014)。四项研究观察到呼气时间长于吸气时间的优势(Bae 等人,发表于《心理生理学》58:e13905,2021 年;Laborde 等人,发表于《可持续发展》13:7775,2021 年;Strauss-Blasche 等人,发表于《Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol》27:601?60,2000 年;Van Diest 等人,发表于《Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback》39:171?180,2014 年)。一项研究报告称,吸气时间长于呼气时间(Paprika 等人,载于 Acta Physiol Hung 101:273?281, 2014)。我们进行了原始研究(N = 26)和重复研究(N = 16),以确定当呼吸频率为 6 bpm 时,1:2 的 IE 比值是否会产生与 1:1 比值不同的心率变异时域、频域或非线性指标。我们最初的研究发现,IE 比对心率变异时域和频域指标没有影响。重复研究证实了这些结果,并发现对心率变异非线性测量没有影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
13.30%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback is an international, interdisciplinary journal devoted to study of the interrelationship of physiological systems, cognition, social and environmental parameters, and health. Priority is given to original research, basic and applied, which contributes to the theory, practice, and evaluation of applied psychophysiology and biofeedback. Submissions are also welcomed for consideration in several additional sections that appear in the journal. They consist of conceptual and theoretical articles; evaluative reviews; the Clinical Forum, which includes separate categories for innovative case studies, clinical replication series, extended treatment protocols, and clinical notes and observations; the Discussion Forum, which includes a series of papers centered around a topic of importance to the field; Innovations in Instrumentation; Letters to the Editor, commenting on issues raised in articles previously published in the journal; and select book reviews. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback is the official publication of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback.
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