During physical exercise, the assessment of cardiac autonomic regulation through the analysis of heart-rate variability is difficult due to non-stationarity of RR intervals. The short duration of stationary epoch of RR-interval series makes not possible the computation of classical time-and frequency-domain parameters. Symbolic analysis can deal with short epoch of RR interval; thus, this study aims to apply symbolic analysis to analyze heart-rate variability of short-distance runners during training and competition. Data consists of RR-intervals extracted from 30s-long electrocardiograms acquired by KardiaMobile of Alivecor in 8 short-distance runners (1/7 M/F, 17[16;20] years) during training and competition. Symbolic analysis classifies a reduced number (in this study, three) of consecutive RR intervals in four patterns according to the sign and number of variations: no variation (0V); one variation (1V); two like variations (2LV); two unlike variations (2UV). An increase in low amount of variations (0V or 1V patterns) is usually linked with increased sympathetic control and vagal withdrawal, while an increase in high amount of variations (2LV and 2UV patterns) is usually linked with sympathetic withdrawal and increased vagal control. In our results, pattern 0V /2LV increases/decreases from rest to post exercise and decreases/increases during recovery, in both training and competition. Thus, our results confirm the opposite trends between low and high variations of symbolic patterns. In conclusion, symbolic analysis seems to be an efficient tool to characterize heart-rate variability during physical exercise at different level of psychophysical stress.

Symbolic Analysis of Heart-Rate Variability during Training and Competition in Short Distance Running / Romagnoli, S.; Sbrollini, A.; Morettini, M.; Burattini, L.. - ELETTRONICO. - 2023:(2023), pp. 585-588. (Intervento presentato al convegno 36th IEEE International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems, CBMS 2023 tenutosi a L'Aquila, Italia nel 2023) [10.1109/CBMS58004.2023.00283].

Symbolic Analysis of Heart-Rate Variability during Training and Competition in Short Distance Running

Romagnoli S.;Sbrollini A.;Morettini M.;Burattini L.
2023-01-01

Abstract

During physical exercise, the assessment of cardiac autonomic regulation through the analysis of heart-rate variability is difficult due to non-stationarity of RR intervals. The short duration of stationary epoch of RR-interval series makes not possible the computation of classical time-and frequency-domain parameters. Symbolic analysis can deal with short epoch of RR interval; thus, this study aims to apply symbolic analysis to analyze heart-rate variability of short-distance runners during training and competition. Data consists of RR-intervals extracted from 30s-long electrocardiograms acquired by KardiaMobile of Alivecor in 8 short-distance runners (1/7 M/F, 17[16;20] years) during training and competition. Symbolic analysis classifies a reduced number (in this study, three) of consecutive RR intervals in four patterns according to the sign and number of variations: no variation (0V); one variation (1V); two like variations (2LV); two unlike variations (2UV). An increase in low amount of variations (0V or 1V patterns) is usually linked with increased sympathetic control and vagal withdrawal, while an increase in high amount of variations (2LV and 2UV patterns) is usually linked with sympathetic withdrawal and increased vagal control. In our results, pattern 0V /2LV increases/decreases from rest to post exercise and decreases/increases during recovery, in both training and competition. Thus, our results confirm the opposite trends between low and high variations of symbolic patterns. In conclusion, symbolic analysis seems to be an efficient tool to characterize heart-rate variability during physical exercise at different level of psychophysical stress.
2023
979-8-3503-1224-9
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/320313
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 1
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact