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1 ess, time to hatch, length, deformities, and heart rate).
2 nicity, worse glycemic control, and elevated heart rate.
3 an intrinsic respiratory modulated pacing of heart rate.
4 th a decrease in mean cardiac output or mean heart rate.
5 ariety of wearable technology devices report heart rate.
6 ated respiration rates, close to the resting heart rate.
7 ne, and (2) process intensity data to derive heart rate.
8 homeostatic mechanism for rapid switches in heart rate.
9 mid-to-anterior cingulate cortex, influence heart rate.
10 e duration of analysed ECG fragments and the heart rate.
11 to modulation and/or synchronization of the heart rate.
12 [7.3-9.3] hours at 68+/-10% of their maximum heart rate.
13 rtical regions involved in the regulation of heart rate.
14 no significant changes in blood pressure or heart rate.
15 n important role in the autonomic control of heart rate.
16 stronger for individuals with a more stable heart rate.
17 autonomic activation and acute increases in heart rate.
18 significantly lower peak whole-body exercise heart rates.
19 ic metabolic rates are likely powered by low heart rates.
20 r (+ 0.85%), mobility and stability (+ 22%), heart rate (- 1.1%) and lean muscle mass (+ 1.4%)] and c
21 [SD, 8] years; 74 [46%] women; mean baseline heart rate, 100/min [SD, 18/min]), 145 (91%) completed t
22 .4 versus 22.7+/-4.0 mL/kg/min; P<0.001) and heart rate (122+/-20 versus 155+/-14 bpm; P<0.001) were
23 ic response to regadenoson (mean increase in heart rate 13.1+/-5.4 bpm vs. 28.5+/-8.9 bpm in those wi
25 the heart rate in ECG strips obtained at low heart rates (25-60 bpm) and processed by the feature det
26 9 vs. 1.70 +/- 0.23 cm s(-1) ) and decreased heart rate (321 +/- 23 vs. 304 +/- 22 bpm, both P < 0.05
27 ; subsequent intervention led to higher mean heart rate (56 +/- 2 beats/min vs. 50.1 +/- 0.4 beats/mi
28 where they are involved in the regulation of heart rate(6), pulmonary artery tone(5,7), sleep/wake cy
29 alivary cortisol (6.8 nmol/l, P < 0.001) and heart rate (7.2 beats/min, P = 0.035) increased signific
30 s/min (-3.7 to 0.1 beats/min) (p = 0.06) for heart rate; 96.8 mL/min/m (71.1-122.5 mL/min/m) (p < 0.0
31 between groups) despite lower peak mean+/-SD heart rates (98.6+/-19.4 versus 112.0+/-20.3 beats per m
32 fferences for 16 outcomes, including resting heart rate (a mean of 76.9/min [SD, 12.1/min] with digox
33 l network, was trained on anonymized data of heart rate, activity level, and ECGs from 7500 AliveCor
34 cal auditory processing and vagal control of heart rate and (2) to verify a possible association betw
35 ory increases in sympathetic nerve activity, heart rate and arterial blood pressure induced by reduct
37 sinus initiates autonomic reflexes to change heart rate and blood pressure for cardiovascular homeost
39 thetic vasomotor neuron activity, generating heart rate and blood pressure oscillations in phase with
40 ing that both cardiovascular physiology (eg, heart rate and blood pressure) and pathophysiology (eg,
47 s for this circuitry in the daily control of heart rate and corticosterone secretion, collectively es
48 nts with Covid-19 developed pQTc; age, basal heart rate and dual antiviral therapy were found as inde
49 atrial fibrillation, basal QTc values, basal heart rate and dual antiviral therapy, age(OR 1.06, 95%
51 utomatically selected based on the patient's heart rate and heart rate variability, derived from the
52 g SE, mice developed an increased interictal heart rate and heart rhythm abnormalities (i.e. sinus pa
53 S6 and HCN4); showed that ivabradine reduces heart rate and increases HRV in zebrafish embryos, as it
54 iac electrical activity, including decreased heart rate and irregular, arrhythmic RR (interbeat) inte
55 lunting of the positive relationship between heart rate and left ventricular (LV) contractility known
57 of ozanimod-related symptomatic reduction in heart rate and no second-degree or third-degree cases of
58 er maximum heart rate, and larger changes in heart rate and rating of perceived exertion during the t
59 nduced PB the dynamics and coherence between heart rate and respiration and their relationship to und
60 The phase coherence between instantaneous heart rate and respiration is shown to increase signific
62 confirmed the role of established genes for heart rate and rhythm (RGS6 and HCN4); showed that ivabr
63 oupling at respiratory rates slower than the heart rate and shown that respiratory oscillations lead
69 ion is hyper-additive for blood pressure and heart rate, and hypo-additive for peripheral haemodynami
70 oncentration and weight loss, higher maximum heart rate, and larger changes in heart rate and rating
73 as three to five heartbeats depending on the heart rate, and was repeated 15 minutes following the ad
76 er BI, a history of malignancy, and elevated heart rate are not included in most VTE risk assessment
80 rioventricular (AV) block without changes in heart rate, as measured by ECG and ex vivo optical mappi
81 formance was negatively correlated with mean heart rate, as well as single-item cognitive load measur
83 le rats exposed to DE demonstrated increased heart rate at the start of LVP assessments, heart rate,
86 ng the levels of salivary cortisol, IOP, and heart rate before, immediately after, and 40 minutes aft
87 established biophysical measurements such as heart rate, blood oxygenation, and body temperature.
89 perative physiological parameters, including heart rate, blood pressure, oxygen saturation, and venti
91 rhythmia or paced monotonically at a matched heart rate; cardiac function was measured using non-inva
92 systemic fetal hypoxia, or changes in fetal heart rate, carotid blood flow or carotid oxygen deliver
93 s of neural activation and physiology (i.e., heart rate change) in detecting affective valence induct
97 ere bacteremia (daily), body temperature and heart rate (continuously monitored by telemetry), and su
98 e is little evidence to support selection of heart rate control therapy in patients with permanent at
101 ile range [IQR], 7.7-23; range, 0-59, median heart rate-corrected QT interval [QTc] at diagnosis 557
103 On the Isle of May in Scotland, we collected heart rate data as a proxy for energy expenditure in 52
105 l, these findings support the acquisition of heart rate deceleration concurrently with fMRI to provid
107 r pressure slopes) and anesthetic (change in heart rate [DeltaHR], average heart rate [HR], reflexes,
108 h renal function or resting and postexercise heart rate demonstrated a positive association of lympho
110 (ECG) PQ interval is known to be moderately heart rate dependent, but no physiologic details of this
112 simulations predicted a further reduction in heart rate during amiodarone administration, indicating
113 se appear to have ample cardiac reserves, as heart rate during hypoxic flights was not higher than in
114 trol network, and increased EMG activity and heart rate during spider conditions in PP in comparison
115 ing lunges followed by a gradual decrease of heart rate during the prolonged glide as engulfed water
117 CG)-depth recorder tag to measure blue whale heart rates during foraging dives as deep as 184 m and a
118 trasound), end-tidal CO(2) (capnography) and heart rate (ECG) were performed for 5 min at rest (normo
119 , beat-to-beat BP (photoplethysmography) and heart rate (electrocardiogram) responses during the LBNP
120 hich the camera could not produce a reliable heart rate estimate lasted under 3 min, thus opening the
122 higher levels of perceived effort when their heart-rate feedback was faster compared with when they c
123 pants did not report lower effort when their heart-rate feedback was slower, which is reassuring, giv
124 stimuli were correlated with the mean of the heart rate ([Formula: see text]) and heart rate variabil
125 icipants false acoustic feedback about their heart-rate frequency during an effortful cycling task.
127 their wrists showed higher and more variable heart rates, greater electrodermal activity, and even hi
128 CM should be suspected in patients with mean heart rate >100 beats/min, atrial fibrillation, and/or p
129 ns and wireless autonomic monitors to record heart rate, heart rate variability, and movement in infa
130 hods of quantifying stress (cortisol levels, heart rate/heart rate variability) require specialist eq
131 changes in bee survival, flower visitation, heart rate, hemocyte levels, and expression of genes rel
132 these patients were older, had higher basal heart rates, higher rates of paroxysmal atrial fibrillat
133 lf circumference (CC, central hypovolaemia), heart rate (HR) and digital heart-level mean arterial bl
134 ode (SAN) dysfunction (SND) manifests as low heart rate (HR) and is often accompanied by atrial tachy
135 1), SNA response to evoked PVCs (p = 0.005), heart rate (HR) at rest (p = 0.003), and exercise (p < 0
136 ctions of affective valence with measures of heart rate (HR) deceleration to predict predefined norma
137 eter, crown-rump length (CRL), and embryonal heart rate (HR) dimensions to identify early pregnancy l
138 To limit autonomic neural influences on heart rate (HR) during isoproterenol, dexmedetomidine an
139 ermal activity (EDA), temperature (TEMP) and heart rate (HR) from 66 people with epilepsy (9.9 +/- 5.
140 y a rise in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) in response to exercise and is necessary
145 RV indices, BRS, office beat-to-beat BP, and heart rate (HR) were measured for 10 minutes at rest.
146 determining BP, that is, stroke volume (SV), heart rate (HR), and total peripheral resistance (TPR),
148 ency distal body temperature (DBT), sleeping heart rate (HR), sleeping heart rate variability (HRV),
151 tic (change in heart rate [DeltaHR], average heart rate [HR], reflexes, induction/recovery times) par
154 el-Ziv '76 and Titchener T-complexity on the heart rate in ECG strips obtained at low heart rates (25
157 isms responsible for exertional increases in heart rate, in patients with HFpEF and senior controls.
159 ss on social preferences, but stress-related heart-rate increases predicted outgroup-hostile behavior
163 rt failure, where respiratory entrainment of heart rate is diminished and respiratory entrainment of
164 gal stimulation [ECVS]), analyzing 15 s mean heart rate, longest RR, pauses, and atrioventricular blo
166 crease of 4.2% [95% CI = 0.8-7.6; P = .03]), heart rate (mean increase 11.6% [95% CI = 8.4-14.8; P <
167 en found in health and wellness trackers for heart rate measurements, have been used to estimate HRV
168 The purpose was to determine the validity of heart rate measures in three commercially available spor
169 es, epidural analgesia, non-reassuring fetal heart rate, meconium in the amniotic fluid, shoulder dys
171 we recorded a 2.5-fold increase above diving heart rate minima during the powered ascent phase of fee
172 e 17 secondary end points (including resting heart rate, modified European Heart Rhythm Association [
174 terms of quality of care, intrapartum fetal heart rate monitoring decreased by 13.4% (-15.4 to -11.3
175 grated in photoplethysmography for real-time heart-rate monitoring, suggesting its potential for prac
176 vity (SNA) and baroreflex control of SNA and heart rate more dramatically in obese male rats; in obes
177 PHSG versus HG fetuses had decreased fetal heart rate-movement coupling (P < 0.05), which may indic
179 of IOP, salivary cortisol, STAI scores, and heart rate occurred after inducing psychologic stress wi
180 group differences in effects of nicotine on heart rate or blood pressure, confirmed comparable dosin
184 r BMI (OR, 1.03 [95% CI 1.102-1.05]), higher heart rate (OR, 1.01 [95% CI 1.00-1.01]), higher respira
185 (OR 1.06, 95% C.I. 1.00-1.13, p<0.05), basal heart rate(OR 1.07, 95% C.I. 1.02-1.13, p<0.01) and dual
186 did not significantly alter blood pressure, heart rate, or plasma cortisol concentrations (all Pover
187 Concomitantly, we observed an increase in heart rate (p < 0.0001) and an increase of cardiac outpu
188 ignificant changes in temperature (P = .31), heart rate (P = .92), diastolic pressure (P = .31), or s
189 P < 0.001) compared to Amb, without changing heart rate (P = 0.6) or vascular-sympathetic baroreflex
191 ls and leukocyte count and directly to basal heart rates(p<0.01).At multivariate stepwise analysis in
192 reshold (H = 82 +/- 4 vs. C = 85 +/- 3% peak heart rate, P = 0.86) after which levels of both molecul
193 eveloped for all 102 ECG variables including heart rate; P, R, and T axis; R-T axis deviation; PR int
195 from other foreign societies, as indexed by heart rate, pupillometry and electrodermal activity.
198 and the averaged baseline measures of HRV to heart rate recovery (HRR) following maximal exercise.
199 k between human genetic variants influencing heart rate recovery after exercise and a variant RE with
202 in the sinoatrial node (SAN) is involved in heart rate regulation by the autonomic nervous system.
204 se of a sympathetic surge or by changing the heart rate, reproducing the different genotype-dependent
205 d into AT (n = 14, 40 min of cycling, 50-75% heart rate reserve), RT (n = 14, 6 resistance exercises,
206 ivities and exercise-real-time recordings of heart rate, respiration rate, energy intensity and other
207 uivalency to existing clinical standards for heart rate, respiration rate, temperature and blood oxyg
208 eart defects (CHD), changes in blood volume, heart rate, respiration, and edema during pregnancy may
210 hysiologic states, including blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation, sho
211 lpha, beta, and theta rhythms, instantaneous heart rates, respiratory rates, and sweat pH, uric acid,
212 here were no significant differences in peak heart rate response during static handgrip between group
213 to examine whether using FFR data to tailor heart rate response in patients with HFrEF with cardiac
215 nce of CDR leads to inappropriately enhanced heart rate responses of the SAN to vagal nerve activity
216 pecific Cx43 knock-out mice the magnitude of heart rate responses to acute increases in intracranial
217 bly, we also found that insects show similar heart rate responses to body position as vertebrates, an
218 sue saturation index, calf circumference and heart rate responses to SAHC, thereby promoting g-tolera
219 ion is hyper-additive for blood pressure and heart rate (responses during co-activation of the two re
220 d neurocirculatory (MSNA, blood pressure and heart rate) responses to chemoreflex inhibition elicited
222 ce HRV (hcn4 and si:dkey-65j6.2 [KIAA1755]); heart rate (rgs6 and hcn4); and the risk of sinoatrial p
223 f diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and resting heart rate (RHR) in patients with hemodynamically signif
224 ed if reinstatement of respiratory-modulated heart rate (RMH) would improve cardiac performance in he
225 oup did not show significant changes in IOP, heart rate, salivary cortisol levels, and STAI scores.
230 external measurements (e.g., motion capture, heart rate, skin conductance, respiration, eye tracking,
232 nstantaneous variability of the beat-to-beat heart rate): spontaneous swallowing 12.02 +/- 1.07 ms vs
233 otoxicity was also assessed by measuring the heart rate, stroke volume, and cardiac output, as cardia
235 s dynamics similar to that of pupil size and heart rate, suggesting that task-related activity is rel
236 heart rate at the start of LVP assessments, heart rate, systolic pressure, and double product fell b
238 m wave condition-occurring near normal human heart rates-that minimizes pulsatile energy transmission
239 trial: P < 0.01, interaction: p = 0.01) and heart rate (time: P < 0.01, trial: P < 0.01, interaction
240 ympathetic nerve stimulation (SNS) increased heart rate to a lesser degree in DBH-Sap hearts compared
243 activity [normalized high frequency power of heart rate variability (HFn)] were evaluated using GLM a
245 complexity analysis, derived from non-linear heart rate variability (HRV) analysis, has been proposed
249 of cardiac autonomic modulation assessed by heart rate variability (HRV) during 14-month expeditions
250 MAE) on inhibitory control and resting-state heart rate variability (HRV) in children with Attention-
251 ts of effortful swallowing maneuver (ESM) on heart rate variability (HRV) in subjects with neurogenic
252 rdiac autonomic function was evaluated using heart rate variability (HRV) indices, cardiovascular aut
254 extract features from ECGs including simple heart rate variability (HRV) metrics, commonly used sign
255 re (DBT), sleeping heart rate (HR), sleeping heart rate variability (HRV), and sleep timing, could be
256 the relationship of a single day measure of heart rate variability (HRV), and the averaged baseline
257 entified eight loci that are associated with heart rate variability (HRV), but candidate genes in the
258 a technique to test whether intrinsic fetal heart rate variability (iFHRV) exists and we show the ut
264 Basal cardiovascular activity, including heart rate variability and sympathovagal balance, which
267 90 minutes after stress, and high-frequency heart rate variability during stress were also assessed.
268 ess-induced interleukin-6 and high-frequency heart rate variability explained 15.5% and 32.5% of the
269 tic age acceleration was not associated with heart rate variability in either preterm or term born in
270 mponents showed that HIV+ men had: (1) lower heart rate variability irrespective of VL status, and (2
274 susceptibility to arrhythmias, whereas lower heart rate variability signals a component of autonomic
275 fluctuations in distal body temperature and heart rate variability that consistently anticipate the
277 ctivation of sgACC/25 reduces vagal tone and heart rate variability, alters cortisol dynamics during
279 ess autonomic monitors to record heart rate, heart rate variability, and movement in infants and pare
280 lected based on the patient's heart rate and heart rate variability, derived from the patient's ECG.
281 e levels of interleukin-6 and high-frequency heart rate variability, higher rmPFC stress reactivity w
287 tegrative physiological parameter of resting heart-rate variability (HRV); low resting HRV indicating
290 stand of the STS test, compared to baseline, heart rate was 50% higher on the day of exit from bedres
293 irls: -0.00; 95% CI: -0.07, 0.07 mmol/L) and heart rate was reduced by 3.4 bpm (95% CI: 0.2, 6.6 bpm)
294 activity responses, mean blood pressure and heart rate were higher during moderate hypovolemia after
296 ed CR (O(2) -CR), mean arterial pressure and heart rate were significantly greater, whereas leg blood
297 nd as low as 2 bpm, while after-dive surface heart rates were 25 to 37 bpm, near the estimated maximu
299 ncrease systemic arterial blood pressure and heart rate with the purpose of maintaining brain blood f