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Heart rate variability in the fetus: a comparison of measures

  • Peter Van Leeuwen , Silke Lange , Daniel Geue and Dietrich Grönemeyer
Published/Copyright: February 22, 2007
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Biomedical Engineering / Biomedizinische Technik
From the journal Volume 52 Issue 1

Abstract

Background: In fetal surveillance, fetal heart rate changes are assessed using cardiotocography (CTG). Standard procedures used in the quantification of heart rate variability (HRV) are seldom applied as CTG does not deliver beat interval durations with the same accuracy as the electrocardiogram (ECG). Thus little is known about the interdependency of standard HRV measures prenatally.

Materials and methods: Using fetal magnetocardiography (FMCG: the magnetic equivalent of the fetal ECG), we investigated standard HRV measures in a homogenous group of 20 healthy fetuses. Ten HRV measures were analyzed in 60 five-minute RR interval time series derived from FMCG acquisitions (16th–40th week of gestation).

Results: Using regression analysis, we found a clear dependency on gestational age and mean RR interval for measures from the time and frequency domains as well as for a measure for complexity. Correlation analysis revealed a strong interdependency of the measures, in particular within the specific domains. An adequate description of fetal HRV may be achieved using the standard deviation from the time domain, the high frequency band (0.15–0.40 Hz) from the frequency domain and approximate entropy as a complexity measure.

Conclusion: The results indicate that different characteristics of fetal HRV are embedded in the different domains.


Corresponding author: Peter Van Leeuwen, Department of Biomagnetism, Grönemeyer Institute for Microtherapy, University Witten/Herdecke, Universitätsstr. 142, 44799 Bochum, Germany Phone: +49-234-9780-140 Fax: +49-234-9780-599

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Published Online: 2007-02-22
Published in Print: 2007-02-01

©2007 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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