The present study examined the potential efficacy of Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA)-biofeedback training in increasing RSA in first-time cardiac surgery patients. RSA is a widely used measure of vagal tone modulation. Therefore, reduced RSA represents an index of poor vagal control and may represent a marker of cardiovascular risk, being predictive of morbidity in patients with cardiovascular diseases. Furthermore, reduced RSA may be linked to depression and/or depressive symptoms, also considered risk factors for cardiovascular disease. The present study intended to verify whether patients after cardiac surgery would be able to increase vagal control after RSA-biofeedback training and to clarify whether an increase in cardiac vagal tone would be associated with a depressive symptoms reduction. 26 consecutive patients who underwent first time cardiac surgery were enrolled in the study. Patients were randomly assigned to the RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation group (N = 13) or to the standard rehabilitation group (N = 13). All the patients underwent pre- and post-training assessments, which included, RSA recording at rest and depressive symptoms evaluation [assessed with the Center for Epidemiological Study of Depression, (CES-D)]. The RSA-biofeedback training consisted of five 45 min daily sessions. During each RSA-biofeedback training session, patients were instructed to maximize their RSA. Patients who underwent RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation showed significant RSA increase from pre- to post-training, and significantly higher post-training RSA compared to patients in standard rehabilitation group. Patients who underwent RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation, also showed a significant reduction in depressive symptoms from pre- to post-training. Furthermore, changes in RSA were inversely associated to changes in CES-D scores from pre- to post-training. These findings add to the literature on the biobehavioral treatment of cardiovascular diseases by showing that the effectiveness of RSA-biofeedback training for increasing vagal modulation extends to patients after cardiac surgery. In particular, RSA-biofeedback was effective in increasing cardiac vagal control and reducing depressive symptoms. These preliminary findings may extend the RSA-biofeedback effectiveness to post-surgical rehabilitation and suggest that this training may add to the efficacy of cardiac rehabilitation protocols and postoperative programs on risk reduction.

RSA-Biofeedback reduce depressive symptoms in cardiac surgery patients

PATRON, ELISABETTA;MESSEROTTI BENVENUTI, SIMONE;PALOMBA, DANIELA
2013

Abstract

The present study examined the potential efficacy of Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA)-biofeedback training in increasing RSA in first-time cardiac surgery patients. RSA is a widely used measure of vagal tone modulation. Therefore, reduced RSA represents an index of poor vagal control and may represent a marker of cardiovascular risk, being predictive of morbidity in patients with cardiovascular diseases. Furthermore, reduced RSA may be linked to depression and/or depressive symptoms, also considered risk factors for cardiovascular disease. The present study intended to verify whether patients after cardiac surgery would be able to increase vagal control after RSA-biofeedback training and to clarify whether an increase in cardiac vagal tone would be associated with a depressive symptoms reduction. 26 consecutive patients who underwent first time cardiac surgery were enrolled in the study. Patients were randomly assigned to the RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation group (N = 13) or to the standard rehabilitation group (N = 13). All the patients underwent pre- and post-training assessments, which included, RSA recording at rest and depressive symptoms evaluation [assessed with the Center for Epidemiological Study of Depression, (CES-D)]. The RSA-biofeedback training consisted of five 45 min daily sessions. During each RSA-biofeedback training session, patients were instructed to maximize their RSA. Patients who underwent RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation showed significant RSA increase from pre- to post-training, and significantly higher post-training RSA compared to patients in standard rehabilitation group. Patients who underwent RSA-biofeedback plus standard rehabilitation, also showed a significant reduction in depressive symptoms from pre- to post-training. Furthermore, changes in RSA were inversely associated to changes in CES-D scores from pre- to post-training. These findings add to the literature on the biobehavioral treatment of cardiovascular diseases by showing that the effectiveness of RSA-biofeedback training for increasing vagal modulation extends to patients after cardiac surgery. In particular, RSA-biofeedback was effective in increasing cardiac vagal control and reducing depressive symptoms. These preliminary findings may extend the RSA-biofeedback effectiveness to post-surgical rehabilitation and suggest that this training may add to the efficacy of cardiac rehabilitation protocols and postoperative programs on risk reduction.
2013
STAMPA
Inglese
38
216
216
1
SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS, 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
Internazionale
Comitato scientifico
Psychology covers resources on all areas of psychology, including applied, biological, clinical, developmental, educational, mathematical, organizational, experimental and social.
Biofeedback; Respiratory sinus arrhythmia; depressive symptoms
none
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
5
Patron, Elisabetta; MESSEROTTI BENVENUTI, Simone; G., Favretto; R., Gasparotto; Palomba, Daniela
01 CONTRIBUTO IN RIVISTA::01.05 - Abstract in rivista
266
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3023105
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