Autonomic modulation, spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity and fatigue in young men after COVID-19

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Autonomic modulation, spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity and fatigue in young men after COVID-19
Abstract
Impaired autonomic modulation and baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) have been reported during and after COVID-19. Both impairments are associated with negative cardiovascular outcomes. If these impairments were to exist undetected in young men after COVID-19, they could lead to negative cardiovascular outcomes. Fatigue is associated with autonomic dysfunction during and after COVID-19. It is unclear if fatigue can be used as an indicator of impaired autonomic modulation and BRS after COVID-19. This study aims to compare parasympathetic modulation, sympathetic modulation, and BRS between young men who had COVID-19 versus controls and to determine if fatigue is associated with impaired autonomic modulation and BRS. Parasympathetic modulation as the high-frequency power of R-R intervals (lnHFR-R), sympathetic modulation as the low-frequency power of systolic blood pressure variability (LFSBP), and BRS as the -index were measured by power spectral density analysis. These variables were compared between 20 young men who had COVID-19 and 24 controls. Independent t-tests and Mann-Whitney U tests indicated no significant difference between the COVID-19 and the control group in: lnHFR-R, P=0.20; LFSBP, P=0.11, and -index, P=0.20. Fatigue was not associated with impaired autonomic modulation or BRS. There is no difference in autonomic modulations or BRS between young men who had COVID-19 compared to controls. Fatigue did not seem to be associated with impaired autonomic modulation or impaired BRS in young men after COVID-19. Findings suggest that young men might not be at increased cardiovascular risk from COVID-19-related dysautonomia and impaired BRS.
Publication
Physiological research
Date
2023
Volume
72
Issue
3
Pages
329-336
Citation Key
latchmanAutonomicModulationSpontaneous2023
ISSN
1802-9973
Archive
Scopus
Language
English
Library Catalog
Scopus
Extra
1 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Latchman, P. L., Yang, Q., Morgenthaler, D., Kong, L., Sebagisha, J., Melendez, L., Green, C. A., Bernard, S., Mugno, R., & De Meersman, R. (2023). Autonomic modulation, spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity and fatigue in young men after COVID-19. Physiological Research, 72(3), 329–336. Scopus. https://doi.org/10.33549/physiolres.935051