Résumé :
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[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS sR0x789n. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Background : A reduced heart rate variability (HRV) is associated with worse prognosis, increased incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality. There are conflicting results and a lack of population-based data regarding the association of HRV with CVD risk factors and its potential role as independent cause or mediator of CVD risk. Methods : Cross-sectional data of a population-based cohort including 1,779 women and men aged 45-83 years were used to analyse associations of time and frequency domain measures of HRV (derived from 5-min ECG segments) with age, behavioural and biomedical risk factors and disease in the whole sample and in a "healthy" subgroup. Results : Age was inversely associated with all measures of HRV (mean standard deviation of normal intervals across 10-year age-groups 32.1,26.9,27.1 and 24.8 ms in women, 29.3,25.9,23.8 and 25.7 ms in men). There was no association of physical activity, current smoking or alcohol with HRV. In age-adjusted models, triglycerides, glucose, waist-to-hip ratio and diabetes were inversely associated with HRV in men and women, and low/high density cholesterol and hypertension in men only (up to 43% difference across risk factor quartiles). Multivariable adjustment and restriction to the "healthy" subgroup attenuated the associations. Conclusions : We found only weak and inconsistent associations of HRV with cardiovascular risk factors. However, these results as well as those from previous studies are still compatible with the hypothesis that short-term HRV may be a marker of ill health or a mediator of the effect of selected biomedical risk factors on CVD.
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