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Lack of circadian variation in the activity of the autonomic nervous system after major abdominal operations.

Ismail Gögenur, Susan Rosenberg-Adamsen, Claus Lie, Verner Rasmussen, Jacob Rosenberg

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Most sudden postoperative deaths occur during the night and we conjectured that this was associated with circadian variations in the autonomic nervous tone, reflected in heart rate variability. DESIGN: Prospective clinical study. SETTINGS: University hospital, Denmark. SUBJECTS: 44 patients who had had major abdominal operations. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were monitored with 24-hour Holter ECG on the second postoperative day-evening-night. We calculated heart rate variability from the standard deviation of all normal R-R intervals (excluding ectopics-NN intervals) around the mean NN interval for the period of measurement (SDNN), the root mean square of the standard deviation of the differences between NN intervals (RMSSD), the percentage of NN intervals differing by more than 50 msec from adjacent NN intervals (pNN50) and the coefficient of component variance (meanNN/SDNN). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Heart rate and heart rate variability. RESULTS: Circadian variation calculated from the SDNN (p = 0.43) the pNN50 (p = 0.11), the RMSSD (p = 0.47), and mean NN:SDNN ratio (p = 0.13) was absent postoperatively. Circadian variation in the heart rate was present but was set on a higher level compared with reference values. CONCLUSION: After major abdominal operations there was a lack of circadian variation in the autonomic nervous tone.
Translated title of the contributionLack of circadian variation in the activity of the autonomic nervous system after major abdominal operations.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Surgery
Volume168
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)242-246
Number of pages5
ISSN1102-4151
Publication statusPublished - 2002

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