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SLEEP AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION
1Department of Human Physiology and Centre for Neuroscience; 2Department of Medicine, Flinders University; and 3Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health, Repatriation General Hospital, Adelaide, Australia
Submitted 12 September 2006 ; accepted in final form 4 November 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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autonomic; atrio-ventricular node; QT; sympathetic
Surprisingly, human studies of cardiac changes during arousal from sleep rarely extend beyond measuring heart rate. In a number of such studies (5, 7, 8, 15, 17, 19), a modest and short-lasting tachycardia has been reported several seconds after an arousing stimulus. Heart rate, however, is a poor index of potentially proarrhythmic changes that may occur in the cardiac conduction system or in the atrial or ventricular myocardium. We thus sought to characterize arousal-induced changes in atrio-ventricular conductance and ventricular repolarization via a more detailed analysis of PR and QT ECG intervals in healthy volunteers. Arousal-induced cardiac changes are short-lasting and require dynamic, beat-to-beat detection of ECG intervals. To this end, we developed an automated ECG analysis algorithm that could be applied to arousal responses.
Many cardiovascular-autonomic variables are gender dependent. Gender differences in the basal HR and QT intervals during sleep have been reported (18), and susceptibility to some types of cardiac arrhythmias appears to differ between the genders (21). Since, in a previous study, we found greater ventilatory and peripheral vasoconstriction responses to arousal in men compared with women (15), our second aim was to compare arousal-induced cardiac responses between healthy men and women.
| METHODS |
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In total, 14 males and 14 females participated. All subjects were nonsmokers, nonsnorers, took no regular medications, and had no auditory, cardiovascular, respiratory, or sleeping problems. All females were studied in the follicular menstrual phase. The study conformed with the principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Repatriation General Hospital Research and Ethics Committee. All volunteers provided written consent after being fully informed regarding the nature and risks of the study. Subjects attended the laboratory
2 h before their normal reported bedtime (range 9:30 to 12:30 PM), having abstained from caffeine for at least 8 h.
Data Collection, Experimental Protocol, and Data Analysis
Sleep parameters, including two EEGs (C4-A1, C3-A2), left and right electrooculograms, and submental electromyograms (from the skin area under the chin) were continuously recorded via a Compumedics S-series system (Abbotsford, Victoria Australia). In each subject, a ECG signal (lead II) was amplified, band-pass filtered (0.330 Hz, Compumedics S series), and recorded using a 1-kHz sample rate.
To elicit sound-induced arousals, auditory tones (0.5 s, 1 kHz, range 5590 dB) were administered throughout the night via ear-insert headphones. Tones were presented during the expiratory phase of ventilation after at least 5 min of sleep after any period of wakefulness (EEG defined wake lasting >15-s) and at least 2-min of stable sleep without arousal (spontaneous or tone-induced EEG changes lasting 315 s). Tone intensity was adjusted in 5-dB increments to achieve as many 315 s EEG-defined arousals as practical.
A single skilled technician, blinded to all but the conventional sleep recordings (EEG, EOG, and EMG) determined sleep stage in 30-s epochs according to standard criteria (25). The same technician identified all 315 s EEG defined arousal events, according to the American Sleep Disorders Association's criteria (1).
ECG Analysis
For each subject, three spontaneous and three tone-induced arousal events recorded during stable stage 2 sleep were selected at random for detailed ECG analysis. Digital ECG recordings from 30 s before to 60 s after the point of onset of EEG-defined arousal event were analyzed using custom-written software in IgorPro (WaveMetrics, Lake Oswego, OR). Our algorithm for ECG wave detection consisted of the following steps (Fig. 1A) : a, manual setting of the threshold (above the peak of T-wave but below the peak of the R-wave); b, manual setting of time points for computing the baseline before P-wave (b1) and after T-wave (b2); c, detection of R-wave peak of the first ECG cycle; d, detection of Q-wave peak; e, computing the baseline voltage before P-wave; f, detection of the P-wave peak; g, detection of the P-wave onset (computed as a time when the voltage exceeded 5% of the P-wave amplitude); h, detection of the baseline after T-wave; i, detection of the T-wave peak; k, detection of the T-wave end (computed as a time when the voltage dropped to 5% of the T-wave amplitude); l, shift to the next ECG cycle. On the termination of the computation, the software returned the text values for the instantaneous HR and for each PR and QT interval, X and Y values (amplitude and time) for each T-wave, and raw ECG trace with the markers superimposed on it (Fig. 1B). This allowed visual inspection (performed on each trace), with manual correction of markers if necessary, prior to calculation of HR and PR and QT intervals. QT interval corrected for HR (QTcorr) was computed according to Bazett's formula (3): QTcorr =QT/RR0.5. We also computed two indices reflecting transmural dispersion of repolarization, according to Zabel et al. (32): Tpeak Tend (time from the peak to the end of each T-wave) and late T-wave area (an area under the falling phase of each T-wave). The latencies of cardiac responses for sound-induced arousals were calculated as time between the onset of an auditory tone and the peak changes in the HR or PR or QT intervals. Beat-by-beat HR, PR, and QT interval measurements were then converted to a beat-interval independent time-base using linear interpolation at 0.1-s intervals. Replicate trial data within each arousal type (tone-induced and spontaneous) were averaged within each subject.
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Gender, arousal type, and time-dependent effects on heart rate, PR, and QT intervals were examined using two-way ANOVA for repeated measures using values recorded at 2-s intervals between arousal onset (time zero) and 20-s post-arousal, with arousal type and time as repeated factors within subjects. A 2-s interval was chosen to allow time effects to be examined over the 20-s postarousal period, while keeping the number of replicate measures within limits compatible with ANOVA for repeated measures. Greenhouse-Geisser adjusted P values < 0.05 were considered significant.
In addition to the ANOVA of group data, we used the cumulative sum method (10) to detect statistically significant deviations from baseline within each individual data trace. By examining each ECG trace in this way, the incidence and magnitude of the postarousal changes in ECG parameters were computed. Linear regression was used to assess dependence between the amplitudes of arousal-induced changes in the ECG interval, and Chi-square tests were used to examine differences in their incidence. Data were analyzed using StatView 5.0 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Group data are reported as means ± SD. P < 0.05 was considered significant.
| RESULTS |
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The subjects were young and of normal weight for height and did not differ in age or body mass index between genders (Table 1). The tone intensity associated with all tone-induced arousals was 63 ± 10 dB (range 5869 dB) and was not different between genders (P = 0.846). The duration of arousal-related EEG changes was nearly identical for tone-induced vs. spontaneous arousals (7.0 ± 1.1 vs. 6.9 ± 1.0 s), and there were no gender or gender x arousal type interaction effects (P = 0.254 and P = 0.717, respectively).
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Values for the basal HR and for the PR and QT intervals are presented in Table 2. Females had a higher heart rate, longer QTcorr interval, and shorter Tpeak Tend duration compared with males, but PR and QT intervals did not differ between males and females.
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As shown graphically in Fig. 2, there were strong time-dependent effects of arousal on heart rate (P < 0.001), PR (P = 0.006), and QT (P < 0.001) interval responses in the 20-s postarousal. There were also significant arousal type x time-dependent interaction effects for heart rate (P < 0.001) and QT interval (P = 0.014) and a trend for a similar interaction for PR interval (P = 0.093), with generally smaller responses for spontaneous compared with tone-induced arousals. The effect of gender was not significant, and there was no gender x arousal-type interaction. Arousals had no effect on Tpeak Tend or late T-wave area.
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Spontaneous Versus Tone-Induced Arousals
The incidence of transient tachycardia and PR prolongation was significantly higher during tone-induced compared with spontaneous arousals (increase in HR: P < 0.001; PR prolongation: P < 0.05). The incidence of QT interval shortening was not different between the two arousal types (P = 0.277).
HR changes during tone-induced arousals were larger compared with spontaneous arousals (+13 ± 9 vs. +9 ± 8 beats per minute, P < 0.05, n = 28) when measured for the whole experimental group. A small number of bradycardic responses did not affect this relationship. For all cases in which PR interval transiently increased, this increase was larger for tone-induced compared with spontaneous arousals (+25 ± 17 vs. +14 ± 11 ms, P < 0.05). The magnitude of QT interval shortening was also substantially larger during tone-induced than spontaneous events (20 ± 8 vs. 12 ± 5 ms, P < 0.01).
| DISCUSSION |
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Mechanisms of Arousal-Induced Cardiac Changes
Several previous studies have examined cardiovascular changes during stimulus-evoked and spontaneous arousal from sleep in healthy humans (5, 7, 8, 17, 19, 22), and our observation of transient tachycardia shortly after an arousal stimulus is in full agreement with these reports. The short latency of cardiac changes observed in this and previous studies clearly indicates that these are neurally mediated responses.
In many instances increases in HR were associated with a transient QT interval shortening. QT interval is known to depend on HR, and shortens as HR increases. This rate-dependent shortening is not instantaneous and requires at least several cardiac cycles to develop. In our study, QT shortening occurred during the same or the subsequent cardiac cycle as an increase in HR, indicating that transient tachycardia was not the cause of QT alterations. Most likely, QT shortening reflects a genuine decrease in myocardial repolarization time elicited by sympathetically released noradrenaline.
Tachycardia is usually associated with a speeding in atrio-ventricular (AV) conductance that is reflected by PR interval shortening. Lack of such shortening in our subjects could mean that either relevant neural pathways were not activated or that PR changes were too small for detection. Our most interesting finding is that in many instances arousal-induced transient tachycardia was associated with PR interval prolongation, which was sometimes quite substantial. PR prolongation could not be attributed to software detection artifacts, as each ECG record was inspected visually following automatic processing. It is possible that PR prolongation was secondary to the rise in heart rate, a phenomenon well documented in humans during rapid atrial pacing (6, 20, 23). However, in this case, one would expect a correlation between the increase in HR and PR interval prolongation, and this was not observed in our study. Another possibility, albeit speculative, is that heart rate and AV conductance are under independent neural control.
Differences Between Spontaneous and Induced Arousals and Gender Differences
The intensity and incidence of cardiac changes were substantially higher during tone-induced arousals, which is possibly indicative of their adaptive role. Although spontaneous awakening may or may not be associated with the onset of physical activity, forced arousal may indicate immediate threat. During the brief period after arousal from sleep, the normal baroreflex is suspended (31), perhaps in preparation for a flight-or-fight response. Horner (14) presents a view that the process of arousal represents a distinct physiological state, with reduced gating of sensory information. In this regard, it is interesting to note that auditory stimuli presented to awake volunteers habituate and produce much smaller cardiovascular effects compared with the situation when these same subjects are asleep (22).
Given that arousal-induced ventilatory changes followed a similar time course and were also larger after tone-induced compared with spontaneous arousals (15), it is possible that cardiac arousal responses are partly mediated by intrathoracic pressure and more delayed chemoreflex changes associated with the ventilatory arousal response. However, the very short latencies to cardiac changes as reported here indicate that they were unlikely to be secondary to ventilatory effects.
In full accord with a previous report by Lanfranchi et al. (18), we found that basal HR was higher, and basal QTcorr was longer in females compared with males. Interestingly, females had slightly shorter basal Tpeak Tend interval. It is currently unknown whether this parameter is rate dependent (like QT-interval), making our finding difficult to interpret. The only gender-related difference in arousal-induced cardiac responses was that in females, but not in males, the amplitude of tachycardic response correlated with QT-interval shortening, for both spontaneous and induced arousals. The reasons for such differences are unclear and may at least, in part, reflect other cardiovascular influences unrelated to gender (e.g., differences in cardiovascular fitness). These data further support the growing evidence of gender differences in cardiovascular reactivity (9).
Relevance to Mechanisms of Arrhythmogenesis
Several types of cardiac arrhythmias are clearly associated with the sleep state (see Ref. 28 for a review). Sudden arousal from sleep by an alarm clock may precipitate potentially fatal polymorphic ventricular tachyarrhythmias ("torsades de pointes") in patients with congenital long QT syndrome (29, 30). Sound-induced arousal from sleep is now a recognized arrhythmia trigger for the subjects with the LQT3 subtype of this syndrome (as opposed to LQT1 subtype in which physical exercise is a major trigger), and it is even recommended that they remove alarm clocks and phones from their bedrooms (26). Our present results indicate that sudden arousals possibly enhance myocardial noradrenaline release, a prerequisite for arrhythmogenesis (27).
Several previous studies have also reported an association between obstructive sleep apnea and cardiac arrhythmias (11, 13, 16). It may be that these arrhythmias are related, at least in part, to numerous arousals occurring during sleep in OSA patients. Such arousals are accompanied with changes in HR, albeit under quite different hemodynamic and ventilatory conditions.
It is unknown whether the changes in AV conductance reported here during arousal represent an additional proarrhythmic factor. We speculate that during increased sympathetic outflow to the ventricular myocardium, prolonged AV delay may potentially contribute to arrhythmogenesis by retarding the arrival of the normal ventricular excitation wave, thereby extending the "vulnerable" diastolic period.
We did not find any arousal-induced changes in Tpeak Tend and late T-wave area, ECG indices of transmural dispersion of repolarization in the ventricular myocardium (32). This may indicate that either these changes are too small to be detected by our method or that in healthy individuals, sound-induced arousals from sleep do not affect transmural dispersion of repolarization.
We observed quite substantial interindividual variability in the magnitude of cardiac responses during arousals. It may be that more reactive individuals are at greater risk of developing cardiac arrhythmias compared with less reactive individuals. If so, assessment of cardiac reactivity during arousals from sleep may prove to be a useful approach for risk stratification.
Perspectives
At present, we can only speculate regarding the mechanisms underlying arousal-related changes in AV conductance. It is possible that arousal resulted in altered autonomic neural outflow to the AV node. Two possibilities exist. First, it may be that sympathetically activated transient tachycardia and shortening of ventricular repolarization were associated with increased vagal outflow to the conducting structures of the heart, resulting in an increase of the PR interval. Second, it is possible that a transient increase of autonomic outflow to the atria resulted in a spatial shift of the pacemaker active site (2, 4), so that the distance from this site to the AV node increased. Transient changes in P-wave morphology in some of our subjects could represent a surface ECG manifestation of such a pacemaker shift. In most instances, these P-wave changes were not associated with any alterations in the shape or amplitude of the QRS complex or T-wave (Fig. 3, AC), and it is thus unlikely that they were caused by respiration-related changes in cardiac axis. Clearly, further experiments with parasympathetic blockade are required to elucidate mechanism of the AV conductance slowing.
Whether arousal-induced increase in AV delay is a previously unknown adaptive physiological phenomena or a sign of pathology remains an open question. Auditory-induced arousals during non-rapid eye movement sleep are associated with a substantial fall in stroke volume, so that cardiac output also falls despite tachycardia (22). It thus seems entirely reasonable to suggest that in the physiologically alarmed state, such as the transition from sleep to wakefulness evoked by potentially dangerous external events, a longer interval between atrial and ventricular contractions may improve ventricular filling and thus counteract the decrease in the cardiac output.
The magnitude of the arousal-induced tachycardic response did not correlate with changes in AV conductance. Also, in males, change in heart rate did not correlate with changes in cardiac repolarization. Furthermore, in many instances, increase in heart rate was the only observable cardiac response to arousal. These results suggest that the cardiac pacemaker area, conductive system, and ventricular myocardium are controlled independently, possibly with simultaneous increase of sympathetic outflow to the pacemaker area and to the myocardium, and of vagal outflow to the conductive system. This, in turn, may indicate that separate subpopulations of cardiomotor neurons in the brain stem are responsible for the control of chronotropic, dromotropic, and inotropic function. Although such a possibility remains speculative with regard to sympathetic control, Gatti et al. (12) reported that functionally distinct preganglionic vagal motoneurons in the nucleus ambiguous independently control cardiac rate and AV conduction. Importantly, coactivation of vagal and sympathetic outflow to the heart was noted in several studies, in which the functional significance of such coactivation often remained unexplained [see review by Paton et al. (24)].
| GRANTS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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