International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences. 02/fev/2024;37:e20210234.

Heart Rate Reactivity to Acute Mental Stress is Associated With Parasympathetic Withdrawal and Adiposity in Firefighters

Haissa A. Mendes ORCID logo , Natália E. Canto, Luiz Rodrigo A. Lima ORCID logo , Guilherme F. Speretta ORCID logo

DOI: 10.36660/ijcs.20210234

Este Artigo Original é referido pelo Editorial "Firefighters Fighting Cardiovascular Death".

Abstract

Background

Firefighters are regularly exposed to stress and have a high incidence of cardiovascular events. Investigating cardiovascular and autonomic reactivity to acute mental stress (AMS) and its association with adiposity may contribute to explaining the increased cardiovascular risk in these professionals.

Objectives

To evaluate cardiovascular and autonomic reactivity to AMS in firefighters while considering adiposity parameters.

Methods

This study recorded the blood pressure and heart rate (HR) of twenty-five firefighters (38±8 years) at rest, while performing the Stroop color-word test to induce AMS, and recovery. Cardiac autonomic modulation (HR variability), baroreflex sensitivity (BRS — sequential method), and adiposity (electrical bioimpedance) were assessed. One-way or two-way analysis of variance followed by Tukey’s post hoc test and multiple linear regression were performed. The significance level was P<0.05.

Results

The AMS increased mean arterial pressure (MAP — Δ16±13 mmHg) and HR (Δ14±7 bpm) ( P <0.05). These responses were associated with parasympathetic modulation withdrawal (RMSSD: baseline: 29.8±18 vs. AMS: 21.5±14 ms; High-frequency: baseline: 5.2±1.4 vs. AMS: 4.5±1.3 Ln ms 2 ; P <0.05) and decreased in the Up gain of the baroreflex (baseline: 8.9±5.1 vs. AMS: 6.3±3.0 mmHg/ms; P <0.05). Groups divided by HR reactivity peak showed parasympathetic modulation withdrawal only in firefighters with lower adiposity (RMSSD: baseline: 27.8±17.6 vs. AMS: 14.4±9.2 ms; High-Frequency: baseline: 5.3±1.2 vs. AMS: 3.8±1.4 Ln ms 2 ; P <0.05). Fat percentage (β = -0.499), BRS (β = 0.486), and sympathetic/parasympathetic balance (β = -0.351) were predictors of HR reactivity ( P <0.05).

Conclusion

Our results demonstrated that HR reactivity to AMS modulated by cardiac vagal withdrawal seems to be influenced by body composition in this group of firefighters.

Heart Rate Reactivity to Acute Mental Stress is Associated With Parasympathetic Withdrawal and Adiposity in Firefighters

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