Dose-related effects of red wine and alcohol on heart rate variability

作者:Spaak Jonas*; Tomlinson George; McGowan Cheri L; Soleas George J; Morris Beverley L; Picton Peter; Notarius Catherine F; Floras John S
来源:American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2010, 298(6): H2226-H2231.
DOI:10.1152/ajpheart.00700.2009

摘要

Spaak J, Tomlinson G, McGowan CL, Soleas GJ, Morris BL, Picton P, Notarius CF, Floras JS. Dose-related effects of red wine and alcohol on heart rate variability. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 298: H2226-H2231, 2010. First published April 23, 2010; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00700.2009.-In healthy subjects a standard drink of either red wine (RW) or ethanol (EtOH) has no effect on muscle sympathetic nerve activity or on heart rate (HR), whereas two drinks increase both. Using time- and frequency-domain indexes of HR variability (HRV), we now tested in 12 subjects (24-47 yr, 6 men) the hypotheses that 1) this HR increase reflects concurrent dose-related augmented sympathetic HR modulation and 2) RW with high-polyphenol content differs from EtOH in its acute HRV effects. RW, EtOH, and water were provided on 3 days, 2 wk apart according to a randomized, single-blind design. Eight-minute segments were analyzed. One alcoholic drink increased blood concentrations to 36 +/- 2 mg/dl (mean +/- SE), and 2 drinks to 72 +/- 4 (RW) and 80 +/- 2 mg/dl (EtOH). RW quadrupled plasma resveratrol (P < 0.001). HR fell after both water drinks. When compared with respective baselines, one alcoholic drink had no effect on HR or HRV, whereas two glasses of both increased HR (RW, +5.4 +/- 1.2; and EtOH, +5.7 +/- 1.2 min(-1); P < 0.001), decreased total HRV by 28-33% (P < 0.05) and high-frequency spectral power by 32-42% (vagal HR modulation), and increased low-frequency power by 28-34% and the ratio of low frequency to high frequency by 98-119% (sympathetic HR modulation) (all, P <= 0.01). In summary, when compared with water, one standard drink lowered time- and frequency-domain markers of vagal HR modulation. When compared with respective baselines, two alcoholic drinks increased HR by diminished vagal and augmented sympathetic HR modulation. Thus alcohol exerts dose-dependent HRV responses, with RW and EtOH having a similar effect.

  • 出版日期2010-6