Conclusions: This is the first study to demonstrate the potential adverse effects of geomagnetic activity on reduced heart rate variability in a large epidemiologic cohort over an extended period, which may have important clinical implications among different populations.
Highlights
• Intense geomagnetic activity up to 24 h reduced heart rate variability (HRV).
• Patients with coronary heart diseases presented higher risk.
• The associations remained similar after the adjustments for air pollutant exposures.
• Geomagnetic activity may account for temporal HRV-related cardiovascular outcomes.
Abstract
Background Solar and geomagnetic activity (GA) have been linked to increased cardiovascular (CVD) events. We hypothesize that heart rate variability (HRV) may be the biological mechanism between increased CVD risk and intense geomagnetic disturbances (GMD).
Methods To evaluate the impact of GA and intense GMD on HRV in 809 elderly men [age mean 74.5 (SD = 6.8)] enrolled in the Normative Aging Study (Greater Boston Area), we performed repeated-measures using mixed-effects regression models. We evaluated two HRV outcomes: the square root of the mean squared differences of successive normal-to-normal intervals (r-MSSD) and the standard deviation of normal-to-normal heartbeat intervals (SDNN) in milliseconds (ms). We also compared the associations between Kp and HRV in patients with and without comorbidities such as diabetes and coronary heart diseases (CHD). We used data on global planetary K-Index (Kp) from middle latitudes as a GA and GMD (>75th Kp) parameters from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency’s Space Weather Prediction Center.
Results We found a near immediate effect of continuous and higher Kp on reduced HRV for exposures up to 24 h prior to electrocardiogram recording. A 75th percentile increase in 15-hour Kp prior the examination was associated with a −14.7 ms change in r-MSSD (95 CI: −23.1, −6.3, p-value = 0.0007) and a −8.2 ms change in SDNN (95 CI: −13.9, −2.5, p-value = 0.006). The associations remained similar after adjusting the models for air pollutants over the exposure window prior to the event. In periods of intense GMD, the associations were stronger in patients with CHD and non-diabetes.
Conclusions This is the first study to demonstrate the potential adverse effects of geomagnetic activity on reduced heart rate variability in a large epidemiologic cohort over an extended period, which may have important clinical implications among different populations.
Conclusions
Our findings showed a significant impact of GA and intense GMD on the reduction in HRV up to 24 h prior to the electrocardiogram in elderly individuals. The associations remained even after adjusting for air pollutants. In periods of intense GMD, the reduction of HRV was even stronger in patients with CHD and no diabetes. This exposure nexus could have important clinical implications for cardiac health and preventative strategies, as HRV is a predictor of CVD morbidity and mortality caused by the dysregulation of sympathetic and/or parasympathetic activity. Future studies may investigate differential susceptibility and related biological mechanisms based on location, age, and other pre-existing comorbidities in different populations.