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Heart rate
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A medical monitoring device displaying a normal human heart rate

Heart rate is the frequency of the heartbeat measured by the number of contractions of the heart per minute (beats per minute, or bpm). The heart rate varies according to the body's physical needs, including the need to absorb oxygen and excrete carbon dioxide. It is also modulated by numerous factors, including (but not limited to) genetics, physical fitness, stress or psychological status, diet, drugs, hormonal status, environment, and disease/illness, as well as the interaction between these factors.[1] It is usually equal or close to the pulse rate measured at any peripheral point.[2]

The American Heart Association states the normal resting adult human heart rate is 60–100 bpm. An ultra-trained athlete would have a resting heart rate of 37–38 bpm.[3] Tachycardia is a high heart rate, defined as above 100 bpm at rest.[4] Bradycardia is a low heart rate, defined as below 60 bpm at rest. When a human sleeps, a heartbeat with rates around 40–50 bpm is common and considered normal. When the heart is not beating in a regular pattern, this is referred to as an arrhythmia. Abnormalities of heart rate sometimes indicate disease.[5]

Physiology

[edit]
Anatomy of the Human Heart, made by Ties van Brussel
The human heart

While heart rhythm is regulated entirely by the sinoatrial node under normal conditions, heart rate is regulated by sympathetic and parasympathetic input to the sinoatrial node. The accelerans nerve provides sympathetic input to the heart by releasing norepinephrine onto the cells of the sinoatrial node (SA node), and the vagus nerve provides parasympathetic input to the heart by releasing acetylcholine onto sinoatrial node cells. Therefore, stimulation of the accelerans nerve increases heart rate, while stimulation of the vagus nerve decreases it.[6]

There are many ways in which the heart rate speeds up or slows down. Most involve stimulant-like endorphins and hormones being released in the brain, some of which are those that are 'forced'/'enticed' out by the ingestion and processing of drugs such as cocaine or atropine.[7][8][9]

This section discusses target heart rates for healthy persons, which would be inappropriately high for most persons with coronary artery disease.[10]

Influences from the central nervous system

[edit]

Cardiovascular centres

[edit]

The heart rate is rhythmically generated by the sinoatrial node. It is also influenced by central factors through sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves.[11] Nervous influence over the heart rate is centralized within the two paired cardiovascular centres of the medulla oblongata. The cardioaccelerator regions stimulate activity via sympathetic stimulation of the cardioaccelerator nerves, and the cardioinhibitory centers decrease heart activity via parasympathetic stimulation as one component of the vagus nerve. During rest, both centers provide slight stimulation to the heart, contributing to autonomic tone. This is a similar concept to tone in skeletal muscles. Normally, vagal stimulation predominates as, left unregulated, the SA node would initiate a sinus rhythm of approximately 100 bpm.[12]

Both sympathetic and parasympathetic stimuli flow through the paired cardiac plexus near the base of the heart. The cardioaccelerator center also sends additional fibers, forming the cardiac nerves via sympathetic ganglia (the cervical ganglia plus superior thoracic ganglia T1–T4) to both the SA and AV nodes, plus additional fibers to the atria and ventricles. The ventricles are more richly innervated by sympathetic fibers than parasympathetic fibers. Sympathetic stimulation causes the release of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine (also known as noradrenaline) at the neuromuscular junction of the cardiac nerves. This shortens the repolarization period, thus speeding the rate of depolarization and contraction, which results in an increased heartrate. It opens chemical or ligand-gated sodium and calcium ion channels, allowing an influx of positively charged ions.[12]

Norepinephrine binds to the beta–1 receptor. High blood pressure medications are used to block these receptors and so reduce the heart rate.[12]

Autonomic innervation of the heart: Cardioaccelerator and cardioinhibitory areas are components of the paired cardiac centers located in the medulla oblongata of the brain. They innervate the heart via sympathetic cardiac nerves that increase cardiac activity and vagus (parasympathetic) nerves that slow cardiac activity.[12]

Parasympathetic stimulation originates from the cardioinhibitory region of the brain[13] with impulses traveling via the vagus nerve (cranial nerve X). The vagus nerve sends branches to both the SA and AV nodes, and to portions of both the atria and ventricles. Parasympathetic stimulation releases the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) at the neuromuscular junction. ACh slows HR by opening chemical- or ligand-gated potassium ion channels to slow the rate of spontaneous depolarization, which extends repolarization and increases the time before the next spontaneous depolarization occurs. Without any nervous stimulation, the SA node would establish a sinus rhythm of approximately 100 bpm. Since resting rates are considerably less than this, it becomes evident that parasympathetic stimulation normally slows HR. This is similar to an individual driving a car with one foot on the brake pedal. To speed up, one need merely remove one's foot from the brake and let the engine increase speed. In the case of the heart, decreasing parasympathetic stimulation decreases the release of ACh, which allows HR to increase up to approximately 100 bpm. Any increases beyond this rate would require sympathetic stimulation.[12]

Effects of parasympathetic and sympathetic stimulation on normal sinus rhythm: The wave of depolarization in a normal sinus rhythm shows a stable resting HR. Following parasympathetic stimulation, HR slows. Following sympathetic stimulation, HR increases.[12]

Input to the cardiovascular centres

[edit]

The cardiovascular centre receive input from a series of visceral receptors with impulses traveling through visceral sensory fibers within the vagus and sympathetic nerves via the cardiac plexus. Among these receptors are various proprioreceptors, baroreceptors, and chemoreceptors, plus stimuli from the limbic system which normally enable the precise regulation of heart function, via cardiac reflexes. Increased physical activity results in increased rates of firing by various proprioreceptors located in muscles, joint capsules, and tendons. The cardiovascular centres monitor these increased rates of firing, suppressing parasympathetic stimulation or increasing sympathetic stimulation as needed in order to increase blood flow.[12]

Similarly, baroreceptors are stretch receptors located in the aortic sinus, carotid bodies, the venae cavae, and other locations, including pulmonary vessels and the right side of the heart itself. Rates of firing from the baroreceptors represent blood pressure, level of physical activity, and the relative distribution of blood. The cardiac centers monitor baroreceptor firing to maintain cardiac homeostasis, a mechanism called the baroreceptor reflex. With increased pressure and stretch, the rate of baroreceptor firing increases, and the cardiac centers decrease sympathetic stimulation and increase parasympathetic stimulation. As pressure and stretch decrease, the rate of baroreceptor firing decreases, and the cardiac centers increase sympathetic stimulation and decrease parasympathetic stimulation.[12]

There is a similar reflex, called the atrial reflex or Bainbridge reflex, associated with varying rates of blood flow to the atria. Increased venous return stretches the walls of the atria where specialized baroreceptors are located. However, as the atrial baroreceptors increase their rate of firing and as they stretch due to the increased blood pressure, the cardiac center responds by increasing sympathetic stimulation and inhibiting parasympathetic stimulation to increase HR. The opposite is also true.[12]

Increased metabolic byproducts associated with increased activity, such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen ions, and lactic acid, plus falling oxygen levels, are detected by a suite of chemoreceptors innervated by the glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves. These chemoreceptors provide feedback to the cardiovascular centers about the need for increased or decreased blood flow, based on the relative levels of these substances.[12]

The limbic system can also significantly impact HR related to emotional state. During periods of stress, it is not unusual to identify higher than normal HRs, often accompanied by a surge in the stress hormone cortisol. Individuals experiencing extreme anxiety may manifest panic attacks with symptoms that resemble those of heart attacks. These events are typically transient and treatable. Meditation techniques have been developed to ease anxiety and have been shown to lower HR effectively.[14] Doing simple deep and slow breathing exercises with one's eyes closed can also significantly reduce this anxiety and HR.[12]

Factors influencing heart rate

[edit]
Table 1: Major factors increasing heart rate and force of contraction[12]
Factor Effect
Cardioaccelerator nerves Release of norepinephrine
Proprioreceptors Increased rates of firing during exercise
Chemoreceptors Decreased levels of O2; increased levels of H+, CO2, and lactic acid
Baroreceptors Decreased rates of firing, indicating falling blood volume/pressure
Limbic system Anticipation of physical exercise or strong emotions
Catecholamines Increased epinephrine and norepinephrine
Thyroid hormones Increased T3 and T4
Calcium Increased Ca2+
Potassium Decreased K+
Sodium Decreased Na+
Body temperature Increased body temperature
Nicotine and caffeine Stimulants, increasing heart rate
Table 2: Factors decreasing heart rate and force of contraction[12]
Factor Effect
Cardioinhibitor nerves (vagus) Release of acetylcholine
Proprioreceptors Decreased rates of firing following exercise
Chemoreceptors Increased levels of O2; decreased levels of H+ and CO2
Baroreceptors Increased rates of firing, indicating higher blood volume/pressure
Limbic system Anticipation of relaxation
Catecholamines Decreased epinephrine and norepinephrine
Thyroid hormones Decreased T3 and T4
Calcium Decreased Ca2+
Potassium Increased K+
Sodium Increased Na+
Body temperature Decrease in body temperature

Using a combination of autorhythmicity and innervation, the cardiovascular center is able to provide relatively precise control over the heart rate, but other factors can impact on this. These include hormones, notably epinephrine, norepinephrine, and thyroid hormones; levels of various ions including calcium, potassium, and sodium; body temperature; hypoxia; and pH balance.[12]

Epinephrine and norepinephrine

[edit]

The catecholamines, epinephrine and norepinephrine, secreted by the adrenal medulla form one component of the extended fight-or-flight mechanism. The other component is sympathetic stimulation. Epinephrine and norepinephrine have similar effects: binding to the beta-1 adrenergic receptors, and opening sodium and calcium ion chemical- or ligand-gated channels. The rate of depolarization is increased by this additional influx of positively charged ions, so the threshold is reached more quickly and the period of repolarization is shortened. However, massive releases of these hormones coupled with sympathetic stimulation may actually lead to arrhythmias. There is no parasympathetic stimulation to the adrenal medulla.[12]

Thyroid hormones

[edit]

In general, increased levels of the thyroid hormones (thyroxine(T4) and triiodothyronine (T3)), increase the heart rate; excessive levels can trigger tachycardia. The impact of thyroid hormones is typically of a much longer duration than that of the catecholamines. The physiologically active form of triiodothyronine, has been shown to directly enter cardiomyocytes and alter activity at the level of the genome.[clarification needed] It also impacts the beta-adrenergic response similar to epinephrine and norepinephrine.[12]

Calcium

[edit]

Calcium ion levels have a great impact on heart rate and myocardial contractility: increased calcium levels cause an increase in both. High levels of calcium ions result in hypercalcemia and excessive levels can induce cardiac arrest. Drugs known as calcium channel blockers slow HR by binding to these channels and blocking or slowing the inward movement of calcium ions.[12]

Caffeine and nicotine

[edit]

Caffeine and nicotine are both stimulants of the nervous system and of the cardiac centres causing an increased heart rate. Caffeine works by increasing the rates of depolarization at the SA node, whereas nicotine stimulates the activity of the sympathetic neurons that deliver impulses to the heart.[12]

Effects of stress

[edit]

Both surprise and stress induce physiological response: elevate heart rate substantially.[15] In a study conducted on 8 female and male student actors ages 18 to 25, their reaction to an unforeseen occurrence (the cause of stress) during a performance was observed in terms of heart rate. In the data collected, there was a noticeable trend between the location of actors (onstage and offstage) and their elevation in heart rate in response to stress; the actors present offstage reacted to the stressor immediately, demonstrated by their immediate elevation in heart rate the minute the unexpected event occurred, but the actors present onstage at the time of the stressor reacted in the following 5 minute period (demonstrated by their increasingly elevated heart rate). This trend regarding stress and heart rate is supported by previous studies; negative emotion/stimulus has a prolonged effect on heart rate in individuals who are directly impacted.[16] In regard to the characters present onstage, a reduced startle response has been associated with a passive defense, and the diminished initial heart rate response has been predicted to have a greater tendency to dissociation.[17] Current evidence suggests that heart rate variability can be used as an accurate measure of psychological stress and may be used for an objective measurement of psychological stress.[18]

Factors decreasing heart rate

[edit]

The heart rate can be slowed by altered sodium and potassium levels, hypoxia, acidosis, alkalosis, and hypothermia. The relationship between electrolytes and HR is complex, but maintaining electrolyte balance is critical to the normal wave of depolarization. Of the two ions, potassium has the greater clinical significance. Initially, both hyponatremia (low sodium levels) and hypernatremia (high sodium levels) may lead to tachycardia. Severely high hypernatremia may lead to fibrillation, which may cause cardiac output to cease. Severe hyponatremia leads to both bradycardia and other arrhythmias. Hypokalemia (low potassium levels) also leads to arrhythmias, whereas hyperkalemia (high potassium levels) causes the heart to become weak and flaccid, and ultimately to fail.[12]

Heart muscle relies exclusively on aerobic metabolism for energy. Severe myocardial infarction (commonly called a heart attack) can lead to a decreasing heart rate, since metabolic reactions fueling heart contraction are restricted.[12]

Acidosis is a condition in which excess hydrogen ions are present, and the patient's blood expresses a low pH value. Alkalosis is a condition in which there are too few hydrogen ions, and the patient's blood has an elevated pH. Normal blood pH falls in the range of 7.35–7.45, so a number lower than this range represents acidosis and a higher number represents alkalosis. Enzymes, being the regulators or catalysts of virtually all biochemical reactions – are sensitive to pH and will change shape slightly with values outside their normal range. These variations in pH and accompanying slight physical changes to the active site on the enzyme decrease the rate of formation of the enzyme-substrate complex, subsequently decreasing the rate of many enzymatic reactions, which can have complex effects on HR. Severe changes in pH will lead to denaturation of the enzyme.[12]

The last variable is body temperature. Elevated body temperature is called hyperthermia, and suppressed body temperature is called hypothermia. Slight hyperthermia results in increasing HR and strength of contraction. Hypothermia slows the rate and strength of heart contractions. This distinct slowing of the heart is one component of the larger diving reflex that diverts blood to essential organs while submerged. If sufficiently chilled, the heart will stop beating, a technique that may be employed during open heart surgery. In this case, the patient's blood is normally diverted to an artificial heart-lung machine to maintain the body's blood supply and gas exchange until the surgery is complete, and sinus rhythm can be restored. Excessive hyperthermia and hypothermia will both result in death, as enzymes drive the body systems to cease normal function, beginning with the central nervous system.[12]

Physiological control over heart rate

[edit]
Dolphin
Conditioned Variation in Heart Rate During Static Breath-Holds in the Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) – examples of instantaneous heart rate (ifH) responses
Dolphin heart rate graph

A study shows that bottlenose dolphins can learn – apparently via instrumental conditioning – to rapidly and selectively slow down their heart rate during diving for conserving oxygen depending on external signals. In humans regulating heart rate by methods such as listening to music, meditation or a vagal maneuver takes longer and lowers the rate to a much lesser extent.[19]

In different circumstances

[edit]
Heart rate (HR) (top trace) and tidal volume (Vt) (lung volume, second trace) plotted on the same chart, showing how heart rate increases with inspiration and decreases with expiration.

Heart rate is not a stable value and it increases or decreases in response to the body's need in a way to maintain an equilibrium (basal metabolic rate) between requirement and delivery of oxygen and nutrients. The normal SA node firing rate is affected by autonomic nervous system activity: sympathetic stimulation increases and parasympathetic stimulation decreases the firing rate.[20]

Resting heart rate

[edit]

Normal pulse rates at rest, in beats per minute (BPM):[21]

Resting heart rate recorded in an elite athlete demonstrating bradycardia at 42 bpm
Newborns
(0–1 months old)
Infants
(1–11 months)
Children
(1–2 years old)
Children
(3–4 years)
Children
(5–6 years)
Children
(7–9 years)
Children over 10 years
and adults, including seniors
Well-trained
adult athletes
70–190 80–160 80–130 80–120 75–115 70–110 60–100 40–60

The basal or resting heart rate (HRrest) is defined as the heart rate when a person is awake, in a neutrally temperate environment, and has not been subject to any recent exertion or stimulation, such as stress or surprise. The normal resting heart rate is based on the at-rest firing rate of the heart's sinoatrial node, where the faster pacemaker cells driving the self-generated rhythmic firing and responsible for the heart's autorhythmicity are located.[22]

In one 1993 study, 98% of cardiologists suggested that as a desirable target range, 50 to 90 beats per minute is more appropriate than 60 to 100.[23] The available evidence indicates that the normal range for resting heart rate is 50–90 beats per minute (bpm).[24][25][26][23] In a study of over 35,000 American men and women over age 40 during the 1999–2008 period, 71 bpm was the average for men, and 73 bpm was the average for women.[27]

Resting heart rate is often correlated with mortality. In the Copenhagen City Heart Study a heart rate of 65 bpm rather than 80 bpm was associated with 4.6 years longer life expectancy in men and 3.6 years in women.[27] Other studies have shown all-cause mortality is increased by 1.22 (hazard ratio) when heart rate exceeds 90 beats per minute.[24] ECG of 46,129 individuals with low risk for cardiovascular disease revealed that 96% had resting heart rates ranging from 48 to 98 beats per minute.[26] The mortality rate of patients with myocardial infarction increased from 15% to 41% if their admission heart rate was greater than 90 beats per minute.[25] For endurance athletes at the elite level, it is not unusual to have a resting heart rate between 33 and 50 bpm.[citation needed]

Maximum heart rate

[edit]
An elite athlete's heart recorded during a maximum effort workout maintaining over 180 bpm for 10 minutes.

The maximum heart rate (HRmax) is the age-related highest number of beats per minute of the heart when reaching a point of exhaustion[28][29] without severe problems through exercise stress.[30] In general it is loosely estimated as 220 minus one's age.[31] The maximum heart rate decreases with aging regardless of fitness, gender or diet.[32][31] Since HRmax varies by individual, the most accurate way of measuring any single person's HRmax is via a cardiac stress test. In this test, a person is subjected to controlled physiologic stress (generally by treadmill or bicycle ergometer) while being monitored by an electrocardiogram (ECG). The intensity of exercise is periodically increased until certain changes in heart function are detected on the ECG monitor, at which point the subject is directed to stop. Typical duration of the test ranges ten to twenty minutes.[citation needed] Adults who are beginning a new exercise regimen are often advised to perform this test only in the presence of medical staff due to risks associated with high heart rates.

The theoretical maximum heart rate of a human is 300 bpm; however, there have been multiple cases where this theoretical upper limit has been exceeded. The fastest human ventricular conduction rate recorded to this day is a conducted tachyarrhythmia with ventricular rate of 600 beats per minute,[33] which is comparable to the heart rate of a mouse.

For general purposes, a number of formulas are used to estimate HRmax. However, these predictive formulas have been criticized as inaccurate because they only produce generalized population-averages and may deviate significantly from the actual value. (See § Limitations.)

Formulas for estimating HRmax
Name Data HRmax Formula Error
Haskell & Fox (1971)[34][35] 35 data points 220 − age SD = 12–15 bpm[36]
Inbar, et al. (1994)[37] 1424 men 205.8 − (0.685 × age) SD = 6.4 bpm
Tanaka, Monahan, & Seals (2001)[38] 315 studies, 514 individuals 208 − (0.7 × age) SD ~10 bpm
Wohlfart, B. and Farazdaghi, G.R.[39][40] 81 men, 87 women Men: 203.7 / ( 1 + exp( 0.033 × (age − 104.3) ) )
Women: 190.2 / ( 1 + exp( 0.0453 × (age − 107.5) ) )
SD = 6.5% men, 5.5% women
Oakland University (2007)[41] 100 men, 32 women, 908 longitudinal observations Linear: 207 − (0.7 × age)
Nonlinear: 192 − (0.007 × age2)
1 SD confidence interval: ±5–8 bpm (linear), ±2–5 bpm (nonlinear)
Gulati (2010)[42] 5437 women Women: 206 − (0.88 × age) SD = 11.8 bpm
Nes, et al. (2013)[43] 1726 men, 1594 women 211 − (0.64 × age) SEE = 10.8 bpm
Wingate (2015)[44] 20,691 males, 7446 females Men: 208.609–0.716 × age
Women: 209.273–0.804 × age
SD = 10.81 (male), 12.15 (female)

Haskell & Fox (1970)

[edit]
Fox and Haskell formula; widely used

Notwithstanding later research, the most widely cited formula for HRmax is still:[45]

HRmax = 220 − age

Although attributed to various sources, it is widely thought to have been devised in 1970 by Dr. William Haskell and Dr. Samuel Fox.[46] They did not develop this formula from original research, but rather by plotting data from approximately 11 references consisting of published research or unpublished scientific compilations.[35] It gained widespread use through being used by Polar Electro in its heart rate monitors,[46] which Dr. Haskell has "laughed about",[46] as the formula "was never supposed to be an absolute guide to rule people's training."[46]

While this formula is commonly used (and easy to remember and calculate), research has consistently found that it is subject to bias, particularly in older adults.[47] Compared to the age-specific average HRmax, the Haskell and Fox formula overestimates HRmax in young adults, agrees with it at age 40, and underestimates HRmax in older adults.[43][44] For example, in one study, the average HRmax at age 76 was about 10bpm higher than the Haskell and Fox equation.[44] Consequently, the formula cannot be recommended for use in exercise physiology and related fields.[35]

Other formulas

[edit]
The various formulae provide slightly different numbers for the maximum heart rates by age.

HRmax is strongly correlated to age, and most formulas are solely based on this.[38] Studies have been mixed on the effect of gender, with some finding that gender is statistically significant, although small when considering overall equation error, while others finding negligible effect.[44] The inclusion of physical activity status, maximal oxygen uptake, smoking, body mass index,[43] body weight, or resting heart rate[41] did not significantly improve accuracy. Nonlinear models are slightly more accurate predictors of average age-specific HRmax, particularly above 60 years of age, but are harder to apply, and provide statistically negligible improvement over linear models.[41][44] The Wingate formula is the most recent, had the largest data set, and performed best on a fresh data set when compared with other formulas, although it had only a small amount of data for ages 60 and older so those estimates should be viewed with caution.[44] In addition, most formulas are developed for adults and are not applicable to children and adolescents.[48]

Limitations

[edit]

Maximum heart rates vary significantly between individuals.[46] Age explains only about half of HRmax variance.[44] For a given age, the standard deviation of HRmax from the age-specific population mean is about 12bpm, and a 95% interval for the prediction error is about 24bpm.[49] For example, Dr. Fritz Hagerman observed that the maximum heart rates of men in their 20s on Olympic rowing teams vary from 160 to 220.[46] Such a variation would equate to an age range of -16 to 68 using the Wingate formula.[50] The formulas are quite accurate at predicting the average heart rate of a group of similarly-aged individuals, but relatively poor for a given individual.

Robergs and Landwehr opine that for VO2 max, prediction errors in HRmax need to be less than ±3 bpm. No current formula meets this accuracy. For prescribing exercise training heart rate ranges, the errors in the more accurate formulas may be acceptable, but again it is likely that, for a significant fraction of the population, current equations used to estimate HRmax are not accurate enough.[35] Froelicher and Myers describe maximum heart formulas as "largely useless".[51] Measurement via a maximal test is preferable whenever possible,[43] which can be as accurate as ±2bpm.[35]

Heart rate reserve

[edit]

Heart rate reserve (HRreserve) is the difference between a person's measured or predicted maximum heart rate and resting heart rate, HRmax − HRrest. As a person increases their cardiovascular fitness, their HRrest will drop, and the heart rate reserve will increase.

Target heart rate

[edit]

For healthy people, the Target Heart Rate (THR) or Training Heart Rate Range (THRR) is a desired heart rate reached during aerobic exercise which enables one's heart and lungs to receive the most benefit from a workout. In practice metrics such as heart rate and VO2 have significant individual variations in their relationship to exercise physiology, meaning a broad range is given for exercise prescription.[52]

By percent, Fox–Haskell-based

[edit]

The THR can be calculated as a range of 65–85% intensity, with intensity defined simply as percentage of HRmax.

Example for someone with a HRmax of 180 (age 40, estimating HRmax As 220 − age):

65% Intensity: (220 − (age = 40)) × 0.65 → 117 bpm
85% Intensity: (220 − (age = 40)) × 0.85 → 154 bpm

Karvonen method

[edit]

The Karvonen method gauges exercise intensity as the percentage of heart rate reserve. It is named after Karvonen, author of the initial 1957 study.[53] Karvonen's study used only six subjects, and Karvonen did not connect his recommendations to VO2 data,[54] but later studies identified a connection.[55] The percentage of heart rate reserve is strongly correlated with the percentage of VO2 max and the percentage of VO2 in reserve,[56] but the correlation is not perfect.[57][58]

As formulas:

% intensity = (THR - HRrest) / (HRmax − HRrest)
THR = ((HRmax − HRrest) × % intensity) + HRrest

Equivalently,

% intensity = (THR - HRrest) / HRreserve
THR = (HRreserve × % intensity) + HRrest

Example for someone with a HRmax of 180 and a HRrest of 70 (and therefore a HRreserve of 110):

50% Intensity: ((180 − 70) × 0.50) + 70 = 125 bpm
85% Intensity: ((180 − 70) × 0.85) + 70 = 163 bpm

Zoladz method

[edit]

An alternative to the Karvonen method is the Zoladz method, which is used to test an athlete's capabilities at specific heart rates. These are not intended to be used as exercise zones, although they are often used as such.[59] The Zoladz test zones are derived by subtracting values from HRmax:

THR = HRmax − Adjuster ± 5 bpm
Zone 1 Adjuster = 50 bpm
Zone 2 Adjuster = 40 bpm
Zone 3 Adjuster = 30 bpm
Zone 4 Adjuster = 20 bpm
Zone 5 Adjuster = 10 bpm

Example for someone with a HRmax of 180:

Zone 1 (easy exercise): 180 − 50 ± 5 → 125 − 135 bpm
Zone 4 (tough exercise): 180 − 20 ± 5 → 155 − 165 bpm

Heart rate recovery

[edit]

Heart rate recovery (HRR) is the reduction in heart rate at peak exercise and the rate as measured after a cool-down period of fixed duration.[60] A greater reduction in heart rate after exercise during the reference period is associated with a higher level of cardiac fitness.[61]

Heart rates assessed during treadmill stress test that do not drop by more than 12 bpm one minute after stopping exercise (if cool-down period after exercise) or by more than 18 bpm one minute after stopping exercise (if no cool-down period and supine position as soon as possible) are associated with an increased risk of death.[62][60] People with an abnormal HRR defined as a decrease of 42 beats per minutes or less at two minutes post-exercise had a mortality rate 2.5 times greater than patients with a normal recovery.[61] Another study reported a four-fold increase in mortality in subjects with an abnormal HRR defined as ≤12 bpm reduction one minute after the cessation of exercise.[61] A study reported that a HRR of ≤22 bpm after two minutes "best identified high-risk patients".[61] They also found that while HRR had significant prognostic value it had no diagnostic value.[61][63]

Heart rate prediction

[edit]

Heart rate prediction using machine learning has gained significant attention in health monitoring and sports performance research. Namazi et.al., 2025 study evaluated various models including Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs), and 1D Convolutional Neural Networks (1D CNNs), using physiological data such as heart rate (HR), breathing rate (BR), and RR intervals collected from wearable sensors during sports activities. The study introduced a hybrid approach combining Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) with these models to enhance predictive performance. Among the tested models, the SSA-LSTM method yielded the lowest prediction error, particularly when multivariate inputs (HR + BR + RR) were used. These findings support the use of AI-driven, multivariate prediction models for real-time cardiovascular monitoring in athletic and healthcare settings.[64]

Development

[edit]
At 21 days after conception, the human heart begins beating at 70 to 80 beats per minute and accelerates linearly for the first month of beating.
Fetal heart rate monitoring. 30 weeks pregnancy.

The human heart beats more than 2.8 billion times in an average lifetime.[65] The heartbeat of a human embryo begins at approximately 21 days after conception, or five weeks after the last normal menstrual period (LMP), which is the date normally used to date pregnancy in the medical community. The electrical depolarizations that trigger cardiac myocytes to contract arise spontaneously within the myocyte itself. The heartbeat is initiated in the pacemaker regions and spreads to the rest of the heart through a conduction pathway. Pacemaker cells develop in the primitive atrium and the sinus venosus to form the sinoatrial node and the atrioventricular node respectively. Conductive cells develop the bundle of His and carry the depolarization into the lower heart.[citation needed]

The human heart begins beating at a rate near the mother's, about 75–80 beats per minute (bpm). The embryonic heart rate then accelerates linearly for the first month of beating, peaking at 165–185 bpm during the early 7th week, (early 9th week after the LMP). This acceleration is approximately 3.3 bpm per day, or about 10 bpm every three days, an increase of 100 bpm in the first month.[66]

After peaking at about 9.2 weeks after the LMP, it decelerates to about 150 bpm (+/-25 bpm) during the 15th week after the LMP. After the 15th week the deceleration slows reaching an average rate of about 145 (+/-25 bpm) bpm at term. The regression formula which describes this acceleration before the embryo reaches 25 mm in crown-rump length or 9.2 LMP weeks is:

Clinical significance

[edit]

Manual measurement

[edit]
Wrist heart rate monitor (2009)
Heart rate monitor with a wrist receiver

Heart rate is measured by finding the pulse of the heart. This pulse rate can be found at any point on the body where the artery's pulsation is transmitted to the surface by pressuring it with the index and middle fingers; often it is compressed against an underlying structure like bone. The thumb should not be used for measuring another person's heart rate, as its strong pulse may interfere with the correct perception of the target pulse.[citation needed]

The radial artery is the easiest to use to check the heart rate. However, in emergency situations the most reliable arteries to measure heart rate are carotid arteries. This is important mainly in patients with atrial fibrillation, in whom heart beats are irregular and stroke volume is largely different from one beat to another. In those beats following a shorter diastolic interval left ventricle does not fill properly, stroke volume is lower and pulse wave is not strong enough to be detected by palpation on a distal artery like the radial artery. It can be detected, however, by doppler.[67][68]

Possible points for measuring the heart rate are:[citation needed]

  1. The ventral aspect of the wrist on the side of the thumb (radial artery).
  2. The ulnar artery.
  3. The inside of the elbow, or under the biceps muscle (brachial artery).
  4. The groin (femoral artery).
  5. Behind the medial malleolus on the feet (posterior tibial artery).
  6. Middle of dorsum of the foot (dorsalis pedis).
  7. Behind the knee (popliteal artery).
  8. Over the abdomen (abdominal aorta).
  9. The chest (apex of the heart), which can be felt with one's hand or fingers. It is also possible to auscultate the heart using a stethoscope.
  10. In the neck, lateral of the larynx (carotid artery)
  11. The temple (superficial temporal artery).
  12. The lateral edge of the mandible (facial artery).
  13. The side of the head near the ear (posterior auricular artery).
ECG-RRinterval

Electronic measurement

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In obstetrics, heart rate can be measured by ultrasonography, such as in this embryo (at bottom left in the sac) of 6 weeks with a heart rate of approximately 90 per minute.

A more precise method of determining heart rate involves the use of an electrocardiograph, or ECG (also abbreviated EKG). An ECG generates a pattern based on electrical activity of the heart, which closely follows heart function. Continuous ECG monitoring is routinely done in many clinical settings, especially in critical care medicine. On the ECG, instantaneous heart rate is calculated using the R wave-to-R wave (RR) interval and multiplying/dividing in order to derive heart rate in heartbeats/min. Multiple methods exist:[citation needed]

  • HR = 1000 · 60/(RR interval in milliseconds)
  • HR = 60/(RR interval in seconds)
  • HR = 300/number of "large" squares between successive R waves.
  • HR = 1,500 number of large blocks

Heart rate monitors allow measurements to be taken continuously and can be used during exercise when manual measurement would be difficult or impossible (such as when the hands are being used). Various commercial heart rate monitors are also available. Some monitors, used during sport, consist of a chest strap with electrodes. The signal is transmitted to a wrist receiver for display.[citation needed]

Alternative methods of measurement include seismocardiography.[69]

Optical measurements

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Pulsatile retinal blood flow in the optic nerve head region revealed by laser Doppler imaging[70]

Pulse oximetry of the finger and laser Doppler imaging of the eye fundus are often used in the clinics. Those techniques can assess the heart rate by measuring the delay between pulses.[citation needed]

Tachycardia

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Tachycardia is a resting heart rate more than 100 beats per minute. This number can vary as smaller people and children have faster heart rates than average adults.

Physiological conditions where tachycardia occurs:

  1. Pregnancy
  2. Emotional conditions such as anxiety or stress.
  3. Exercise

Pathological conditions where tachycardia occurs:

  1. Sepsis
  2. Fever
  3. Anemia
  4. Hypoxia
  5. Hyperthyroidism
  6. Hypersecretion of catecholamines
  7. Cardiomyopathy
  8. Valvular heart diseases
  9. Acute Radiation Syndrome
  10. Dehydration
  11. Metabolic myopathies (At rest, tachycardia is commonly seen in fatty acid oxidation disorders. An inappropriate rapid heart rate response to exercise is seen in muscle glycogenoses and mitochondrial myopathies, where the tachycardia is faster than would be expected during exercise).

Bradycardia

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Bradycardia was defined as a heart rate less than 60 beats per minute when textbooks asserted that the normal range for heart rates was 60–100 bpm. The normal range has since been revised in textbooks to 50–90 bpm for a human at total rest. Setting a lower threshold for bradycardia prevents misclassification of fit individuals as having a pathologic heart rate. The normal heart rate number can vary as children and adolescents tend to have faster heart rates than average adults. Bradycardia may be associated with medical conditions such as hypothyroidism, heart disease, or inflammatory disease.[71] At rest, although tachycardia is more commonly seen in fatty acid oxidation disorders, more rarely acute bradycardia can occur.[72]

Trained athletes tend to have slow resting heart rates, and resting bradycardia in athletes should not be considered abnormal if the individual has no symptoms associated with it. For example, Miguel Indurain, a Spanish cyclist and five time Tour de France winner, had a resting heart rate of 28 beats per minute,[73] one of the lowest ever recorded in a healthy human. Daniel Green achieved the world record for the slowest heartbeat in a healthy human with a heart rate of just 26 bpm in 2014.[74]

Arrhythmia

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Arrhythmias are abnormalities of the heart rate and rhythm (sometimes felt as palpitations). They can be divided into two broad categories: fast and slow heart rates. Some cause few or minimal symptoms. Others produce more serious symptoms of lightheadedness, dizziness and fainting.[75]

Hypertension

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Elevated heart rate is a powerful predictor of morbidity and mortality in patients with hypertension.[76] Atherosclerosis and dysautonomia are major contributors to the pathogenesis.[76]

Correlation with cardiovascular mortality risk

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A number of investigations indicate that faster resting heart rate has emerged as a new risk factor for mortality in homeothermic mammals, particularly cardiovascular mortality in human beings. High heart rate is associated with endothelial dysfunction and increased atheromatous plaque formation leading to atherosclerosis.[77] Faster heart rate may accompany increased production of inflammation molecules and increased production of reactive oxygen species in cardiovascular system, in addition to increased mechanical stress to the heart. There is a correlation between increased resting rate and cardiovascular risk. This is not seen to be "using an allotment of heart beats" but rather an increased risk to the system from the increased rate.[1]

An Australian-led international study of patients with cardiovascular disease has shown that heart beat rate is a key indicator for the risk of heart attack. The study, published in The Lancet (September 2008) studied 11,000 people, across 33 countries, who were being treated for heart problems. Those patients whose heart rate was above 70 beats per minute had significantly higher incidence of heart attacks, hospital admissions and the need for surgery. Higher heart rate is thought to be correlated with an increase in heart attack and about a 46 percent increase in hospitalizations for non-fatal or fatal heart attack.[78]

Other studies have shown that a high resting heart rate is associated with an increase in cardiovascular and all-cause mortality in the general population and in patients with chronic diseases.[79][80] A faster resting heart rate is associated with shorter life expectancy [1][81] and is considered a strong risk factor for heart disease and heart failure,[82] independent of level of physical fitness.[83] Specifically, a resting heart rate above 65 beats per minute has been shown to have a strong independent effect on premature mortality; every 10 beats per minute increase in resting heart rate has been shown to be associated with a 10–20% increase in risk of death.[84] In one study, men with no evidence of heart disease and a resting heart rate of more than 90 beats per minute had a five times higher risk of sudden cardiac death.[82] Similarly, another study found that men with resting heart rates of over 90 beats per minute had an almost two-fold increase in risk for cardiovascular disease mortality; in women it was associated with a three-fold increase.[81] In patients having heart rates of 70 beats/minute or above, each additional beat/minute was associated with increased rate of cardiovascular death and heart failure hospitalization.[77]

Given these data, heart rate should be considered in the assessment of cardiovascular risk, even in apparently healthy individuals.[85] Heart rate has many advantages as a clinical parameter: It is inexpensive and quick to measure and is easily understandable.[86] Although the accepted limits of heart rate are between 60 and 100 beats per minute, this was based for convenience on the scale of the squares on electrocardiogram paper; a better definition of normal sinus heart rate may be between 50 and 90 beats per minute.[87][79]

Standard textbooks of physiology and medicine mention that heart rate (HR) is readily calculated from the ECG as follows: HR = 1000*60/RR interval in milliseconds, HR = 60/RR interval in seconds, or HR = 300/number of large squares between successive R waves. In each case, the authors are actually referring to instantaneous HR, which is the number of times the heart would beat if successive RR intervals were constant.

Lifestyle and pharmacological regimens may be beneficial to those with high resting heart rates.[84] Exercise is one possible measure to take when an individual's heart rate is higher than 80 beats per minute.[86][88] Diet has also been found to be beneficial in lowering resting heart rate: In studies of resting heart rate and risk of death and cardiac complications on patients with type 2 diabetes, legumes were found to lower resting heart rate.[89] This is thought to occur because in addition to the direct beneficial effects of legumes, they also displace animal proteins in the diet, which are higher in saturated fat and cholesterol.[89] Another nutrient is omega-3 long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (omega-3 fatty acid or LC-PUFA). In a meta-analysis with a total of 51 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving 3,000 participants, the supplement mildly but significantly reduced heart rate (-2.23 bpm; 95% CI: -3.07, -1.40 bpm). When docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) were compared, modest heart rate reduction was observed in trials that supplemented with DHA (-2.47 bpm; 95% CI: -3.47, -1.46 bpm), but not in those received EPA.[90]

A very slow heart rate (bradycardia) may be associated with heart block.[91] It may also arise from autonomous nervous system impairment.[medical citation needed]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Heart rate, also known as pulse, refers to the number of times the heart beats per minute to pump oxygenated blood throughout the body. This rhythmic contraction and relaxation of the heart's chambers, driven by electrical impulses from the sinoatrial node, ensures adequate circulation to meet the body's demands for oxygen and nutrients. In healthy adults at rest, a normal heart rate typically ranges from 60 to 100 beats per minute, with an optimal range of 60-80 beats per minute, though well-conditioned athletes may have lower rates around 40 to 60 beats per minute due to enhanced cardiovascular efficiency. For children, resting heart rates are generally higher, varying by age—for instance, infants (birth to 12 months) have normal resting heart rates typically ranging from 100 to 180 beats per minute (bpm) when awake and not exercising, with newborns (birth to 4 weeks) ranging from 100 to 205 bpm and older infants (4 weeks to 1 year) from 100 to 180 bpm; rates are lower when sleeping and higher when active, while school-aged children range from 70 to 100 beats per minute. During , heart rate increases to supply more blood to muscles, often reaching 50% to 85% of an individual's maximum heart rate, which is commonly estimated using the traditional formula of 220 minus age, although this has significant limitations and prediction errors (often ±10-20 bpm or more); alternatives such as the Tanaka formula (208 − (0.7 × age)) are widely regarded as more accurate in many cases, particularly for older adults, while direct measurement via maximal exercise testing remains the gold standard. Several factors influence heart rate, including , emotional stress, body temperature, medications, and hormonal changes; for example, exercise and anxiety can elevate it, while beta-blockers may lower it. Body position also plays a role—heart rate tends to rise when standing compared to lying down due to gravitational effects on blood flow. Additionally, age, fitness level, and underlying health conditions such as thyroid disorders or can alter baseline rates. Heart rate is commonly measured by palpating the at accessible arteries, such as the in the or carotid in the , and counting beats for 30 or 60 seconds, then multiplying if necessary to obtain beats per minute. Wearable devices and medical equipment like electrocardiograms provide more precise, continuous monitoring, especially useful for detecting irregularities. Monitoring heart rate is essential for assessing and detecting potential issues; persistently high rates above 100 beats per minute at rest () or low rates below 60 () may signal conditions like arrhythmias, heart disease, or imbalances, warranting medical evaluation if accompanied by symptoms such as or . Regular tracking during exercise helps ensure safe intensity levels and supports overall heart health management.

Physiology

Intrinsic Cardiac Regulation

The sinoatrial (SA) node functions as the heart's primary pacemaker, a cluster of specialized autorhythmic cells located at the junction of the and right atrium, responsible for initiating spontaneous electrical impulses that set the baseline heart rhythm. These cells exhibit through phase 4 diastolic , primarily driven by the funny current (I_f), a hyperpolarization-activated mixed sodium-potassium inward current that activates upon to potentials between -60 and -40 mV, slowly shifting the membrane toward the threshold for firing. This process generates action potentials at an intrinsic rate of 60-100 beats per minute in humans, independent of external neural or hormonal inputs, ensuring coordinated atrial contraction before to the ventricles. The efficiently relays these impulses from the SA node through the heart's chambers to synchronize contractions. The electrical wave spreads rapidly across the atrial myocardium via internodal pathways at approximately 0.5 m/s, reaching the atrioventricular (AV) node near the , where conduction decelerates to about 0.05 m/s to impose a 120-200 ms delay, allowing atrial to complete before ventricular activation. The impulse then proceeds through the AV node to the , a fibrous tract along the conducting at around 2 m/s, which bifurcates into left and right bundle branches; these distribute the signal to the Purkinje fiber network in the ventricular walls, propagating at up to 4 m/s to rapidly excite the myocardium from to epicardium. This hierarchical system, composed of modified cardiac myocytes with fewer myofibrils and abundant gap junctions, maintains efficient, unidirectional impulse flow at rates optimized for effective pumping. Unlike action potentials in contractile cardiomyocytes, those in pacemaker cells lack a stable resting phase and fast sodium channels, relying instead on distinct ion dynamics across phases 0-4. During phase 4, I_f provides initial Na⁺/K⁺ influx, augmented by decaying outward K⁺ conductance and influx through Ca²⁺ channels (activating near -50 mV), progressively depolarizing the membrane from -60 mV; L-type Ca²⁺ channels then open around -40 mV to accelerate this rise. Phase 0 upstroke is calcium-dependent, with L-type Ca²⁺ channels mediating the primary inward current for a slower depolarization slope compared to ventricular cells. in phase 3 results from K⁺ efflux via delayed rectifier channels (I_Kr and I_Ks), alongside Ca²⁺ channel inactivation, restoring the potential to initiate the next cycle; sodium ions play a minimal role in the upstroke but contribute via I_f to pacemaking. These interactions, governed by voltage- and time-dependent gating, underpin the SA node's autonomous rhythmicity. Factors intrinsic to the myocardium, such as , modulate this baseline pacemaker activity by altering kinetics and enzymatic rates. For instance, each 1°C rise in core body increases the intrinsic heart rate by approximately 10 beats per minute, as higher temperatures accelerate the Q₁₀-dependent processes of and conduction, enhancing I_f activation and Ca²⁺ channel function without autonomic involvement. This thermoregulatory response helps maintain during fever or environmental heat stress.

Neural Control Mechanisms

The neural control of heart rate is primarily mediated by the , which integrates central commands from the with peripheral sensory feedback to fine-tune in response to physiological demands. The cardiovascular control centers located in the serve as the primary integration site, comprising the cardioacceleratory center, which promotes sympathetic outflow to increase heart rate, and the cardioinhibitory center, which enhances parasympathetic activity to decrease it. These centers receive inputs from higher regions and peripheral receptors, enabling rapid adjustments to maintain . The parasympathetic branch exerts a tonic inhibitory influence on heart rate through the vagus nerve (cranial nerve X), which innervates the sinoatrial (SA) node. Upon stimulation, postganglionic parasympathetic fibers release acetylcholine, which binds to muscarinic M2 receptors on SA node cells, opening potassium channels and increasing potassium conductance. This hyperpolarizes the membrane, slowing the rate of spontaneous depolarization and reducing heart rate, typically dominating during rest to produce a baseline rate of 60–75 beats per minute. In contrast, the sympathetic branch accelerates heart rate via cardiac accelerator nerves originating from the sympathetic chain ganglia, releasing norepinephrine that binds to β1-adrenergic receptors on the SA node. This enhances calcium influx through L-type channels, steepening the pacemaker potential and facilitating faster depolarization, which can elevate heart rate up to 200 beats per minute during fight-or-flight responses. Peripheral feedback mechanisms further refine these central controls through baroreceptors and chemoreceptors. Baroreceptors in the and detect changes in arterial blood pressure, relaying signals via the (cranial nerve IX) from the carotid sinus and the from the aortic arch to the medullary centers. Elevated pressure triggers increased parasympathetic output and sympathetic inhibition to lower heart rate, while has the opposite effect to restore . Chemoreceptors in the carotid and aortic bodies sense alterations in blood oxygen, , and , similarly modulating medullary activity to adjust heart rate accordingly. Additionally, the provides a specific pathway for preload regulation: stretch receptors in the right atrium detect increased venous return, sending afferent signals via the to the medulla, which then decreases and boosts sympathetic outflow to accelerate heart rate and accommodate higher cardiac filling. This reflex ensures that the intrinsic SA node rhythm is dynamically modulated to match circulatory needs without intrinsic overload.

Hormonal and Biochemical Influences

Catecholamines, particularly epinephrine and norepinephrine, exert profound effects on heart rate by binding to beta-1 adrenergic receptors on cardiac pacemaker cells, activating Gs proteins that stimulate adenylate cyclase to increase intracellular (cAMP) levels, thereby enhancing the rate of spontaneous depolarization in the . These hormones are primarily released from the , amplifying responses through this second messenger pathway that promotes of channels and faster pacemaker activity. Thyroid hormones, especially (T3), influence heart rate by enhancing the sensitivity and expression of beta-adrenergic receptors, which potentiates catecholamine-mediated signaling and elevates , resulting in increased and often chronic in conditions like . T3 directly upregulates beta-1 receptor density on cardiomyocytes and cells, facilitating greater sympathetic responsiveness without altering release itself. In hyperthyroid states, this leads to sustained elevations in resting heart rate due to accelerated firing and shortened duration. Electrolytes such as calcium play a critical role in heart rate regulation through their involvement in excitation-contraction coupling, where influx via L-type calcium channels in the contributes to phase 0 and sets the pace of . These voltage-gated channels, activated during action potentials, allow calcium entry that triggers further calcium release from the , sustaining rhythmic contractions and influencing conduction velocity across the myocardium. disrupts this process by reducing extracellular calcium availability, prolonging the , slowing pacemaking, and impairing atrioventricular conduction, which can manifest as or arrhythmias. Other biochemical agents, including , modulate heart rate by inhibiting enzymes, which prevents cAMP breakdown and mimics sympathetic stimulation, leading to increased firing and mild at moderate doses. Similarly, stimulates nicotinic receptors in autonomic ganglia, prompting norepinephrine release from sympathetic endings and subsequent beta-1 receptor activation, which elevates heart rate by 10-20 beats per minute in acute exposure. These effects highlight how exogenous biochemicals can transiently override intrinsic regulatory mechanisms.

Modulating Factors

Hyperthermia, an elevation in body temperature, increases heart rate as a compensatory mechanism to enhance metabolic demand and facilitate heat dissipation through increased . This response is driven by physiological adjustments that prioritize cutaneous blood flow, often leading to during exposure to high environmental temperatures or fever. Physical activity modulates heart rate by shifting autonomic balance toward sympathetic dominance, which accelerates the rate to meet elevated oxygen demands during exercise. As intensity rises, catecholamine release further elevates heart rate, supporting greater and overall cardiovascular performance. Acute psychological stress elevates heart rate through activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which triggers cortisol release alongside sympathetic arousal, preparing the body for a "fight-or-flight" response. This transient increase in heart rate and blood pressure can persist briefly after the stressor resolves, contributing to cardiovascular strain if recurrent. Several factors can decrease heart rate, including training-induced enhancements in parasympathetic tone among athletes, where elite endurance performers often exhibit resting rates of 30-40 beats per minute due to augmented vagal activity. Activation of peripheral chemoreceptors during hypoxia typically elicits an initial bradycardic response, though this may be overridden by ventilatory drives leading to net tachycardia in many contexts. Resting heart rate gradually declines with age, attributed to progressive in the that impairs conduction and reduces intrinsic pacemaker activity. Sex differences emerge post-puberty, with females showing slightly higher resting rates (approximately 5-10 beats per minute above males) linked to estrogen's influence on autonomic and smaller cardiac size. Recent evidence highlights sleep stages as modulators of heart rate, with non-rapid eye movement (non-) sleep associated with lower rates due to predominant parasympathetic activity, while rapid eye movement (REM) sleep elevates rates through autonomic shifts toward sympathetic dominance, as observed in studies of healthy adults using . This cyclical variation underscores sleep's role in cardiovascular recovery.

Heart Rate Variations

Resting Heart Rate

Resting heart rate (RHR) is defined as the number of heartbeats per minute measured when an individual is at complete physiological rest, typically after 5-10 minutes in a or seated position in a calm environment. For healthy adults, normal RHR ranges from 60 to 100 beats per minute (bpm), with an optimal range of 60-80 bpm, though values between 55 and 85 bpm are common in relaxed, fit individuals. Several factors influence RHR values. Physical fitness level is a key determinant; endurance athletes often have RHR below 60 bpm due to enhanced from the , which increases and cardiac efficiency. Age significantly affects RHR, with newborns exhibiting rates of 120-160 bpm that progressively decline to adult norms by as the cardiovascular system matures. Body size also plays a role, as larger individuals tend to have higher RHR to support greater metabolic demands. RHR displays natural diurnal variation, with the lowest rates typically occurring in the early morning after sleep and gradually increasing to a peak in the afternoon, influenced by circadian rhythms and daily activity patterns. During recovery from acute illness, resting heart rate typically decreases as fever and inflammation subside, the body's stress response normalizes, and sympathetic nervous system activity reduces, allowing parasympathetic tone to restore balance; this normalization often occurs within days to weeks, though it may take longer in cases like COVID-19 (up to 79 days on average). Elevated RHR above 80 bpm is a recognized risk marker for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, independent of other factors. Data from the Framingham Heart Study indicate that higher RHR correlates with increased mortality risk; for example, men with RHR ≥85 bpm had a relative risk of death 1.8 times higher than those with ≤65 bpm. Recent analyses using wearable devices have refined RHR norms, emphasizing population diversity; for example, large-scale studies like Health eHeart report real-world heart rate averages around 75-80 bpm across ethnic groups.

Maximum and Target Heart Rates

The maximum heart rate (HRmax) is defined as the highest heart rate an individual can achieve during maximal physical , representing the peak sustainable rate before exhaustion sets in. This value declines progressively with age due to physiological changes in cardiac function and autonomic regulation, typically decreasing by about 0.7 to 1 beat per minute per year after early adulthood. As of recent research (into the 2020s), no single age-predicted formula is universally the most accurate for estimating HRmax, as all have significant limitations and prediction errors often ±10–20 bpm or more. The traditional formula, 220 minus age, was originally proposed by and in based on observations from exercise testing in healthy adults. A widely regarded more accurate alternative, particularly for older adults, is the Tanaka formula—HRmax = 208 - (0.7 × age)—developed by et al. in 2001 through of over 18,000 subjects across various studies and recommended by sources such as the Mayo Clinic. Another proposal, derived from the HUNT Fitness Study, is 211 minus 0.64 times age, proposed by Nes et al., which claims better accuracy in specific populations. For a 30-year-old individual, these formulas provide estimates of approximately 190 bpm (220 - age), 187 bpm (Tanaka), and 192 bpm (Nes), highlighting the similar but varying predictions from different equations. However, studies show that all age-based formulas perform poorly overall, with significant individual variability arising from factors such as fitness level, , and that are not accounted for in the predictions. Consequently, these formulas serve as rough approximations, and for precise applications, such as establishing exercise training zones in endurance activities, individuals should determine their actual maximum heart rate through maximal exercise testing (e.g., laboratory stress tests) or field-based protocols (e.g., ramp tests or all-out efforts) rather than relying solely on age-based predictions. Target heart rates are derived as percentages of HRmax to guide for specific goals, helping to optimize aerobic and anaerobic adaptations while minimizing risk. For example, 50-70% of HRmax corresponds to moderate-intensity aerobic , which feels comfortably challenging with quickened breathing but not out of breath and light sweating after about 10 minutes, often associated with oxidation and endurance building; while 70-85% targets vigorous cardio conditioning, involving harder effort with shorter breaths, deep and rapid breathing, and sweating after only a few minutes, to improve . Intensity in these zones can be monitored using a fitness tracker or the talk test, where individuals can converse but not sing during moderate exercise, but can only say a few words without pausing for breath during vigorous exercise. Recent studies highlight additional influences on HRmax, such as genetic variants that modulate acute heart rate responses during exercise, contributing to inter-individual differences beyond age alone. differences also play a role, with men typically exhibiting slightly higher peak heart rates than women during maximal exercise, by about 3-5 beats per minute on average.

Heart Rate Reserve and Recovery

Heart rate reserve (HRR) represents the difference between an individual's maximum heart rate (HRmax) and resting heart rate (RHR), providing a measure of the usable range of heart rates available during physical activity. This concept, introduced in a seminal 1957 longitudinal study on training effects, allows for personalized exercise intensity prescriptions by accounting for individual fitness levels rather than relying solely on percentages of HRmax. HRR is calculated as HRR = HRmax - RHR, and it forms the basis of the Karvonen formula for determining target heart rates: target HR = RHR + (HRR × desired intensity percentage). For example, a person with an HRmax of 180 bpm and RHR of 60 bpm has an HRR of 120 bpm; at 60% intensity, the target HR would be 60 + (120 × 0.60) = 132 bpm, corresponding to moderate aerobic exercise. The Karvonen method is also applied to define training zones targeting specific physiological adaptations, including maximal fat oxidation (Fatmax). The Fatmax zone, associated with the highest rate of fat oxidation during exercise, is commonly linked to Zone 2 in endurance training, typically corresponding to 60-70% of HRR. For example, a 58-year-old male with a resting heart rate of 84 bpm and a maximum heart rate of 167 bpm has an HRR of 83 bpm (167 - 84 = 83). Applying the Karvonen formula for the Fatmax zone yields:
  • Lower limit: 84 + (83 × 0.60) = 134 bpm
  • Upper limit: 84 + (83 × 0.70) = 142 bpm
Thus, the target range for the Fatmax zone is approximately 134-142 bpm. Note that true Fatmax intensity is best determined via laboratory testing (e.g., gas exchange analysis), as it varies individually, although this range is widely used for training aimed at maximal fat oxidation. An alternative approach to estimating training zones without full laboratory testing is the Zoladz method, which approximates the anaerobic threshold by subtracting fixed displacements from HRmax to define exercise intensity zones. Developed as a practical field-based technique, it uses formulas like zone 1 threshold = HRmax - 50 bpm (with ±5 bpm range), zone 2 = HRmax - 40 bpm, and higher zones with progressively smaller subtractions (e.g., zone 5 = HRmax - 10 bpm), sometimes adjusted by an age factor such as 0.8 × age to refine the anaerobic threshold estimate. This method enables athletes to target specific physiological responses, such as fat oxidation in lower zones or lactate accumulation in higher ones, based on heart rate deflection points observed in gas exchange studies. Heart rate recovery (HRR), distinct from reserve, refers to the rate at which heart rate decreases after cessation of exercise, serving as a marker of and function. A healthy post-exercise drop of more than 12 beats per minute (bpm) in the first minute indicates good vagal reactivation and parasympathetic dominance, with values exceeding 20 bpm often seen in well-conditioned individuals. Norms for 1-minute HRR vary by age, fitness level, and exercise protocol, but a drop of 18 bpm or higher is generally considered good. For individuals aged 40-49 with moderate fitness, a 1-minute HRR of 18-25 bpm or higher is typical, with ≥18 bpm considered good and approximately 22 bpm as a target. Moderate fitness supports better recovery than sedentary levels. Slower recovery, such as ≤12 bpm in the initial minute, correlates with impaired autonomic balance and has prognostic significance, independently predicting increased risk of cardiac events and all-cause mortality in large cohort studies. In the context of resistance training, such as deadlifts, heart rate recovery is often slower than after aerobic exercise due to the anaerobic components, which lead to greater lactate accumulation and prolonged sympathetic nervous system activation. For instance, a reduction from 160 bpm to 100-110 bpm after 4 minutes of rest represents decent recovery. A first-minute drop of 15-30 bpm is typical for individuals with good fitness, while full return to resting rates of 60-80 bpm commonly takes 10-30 minutes. This recovery process can be influenced by factors such as beginner status, moderate fitness levels, high exercise intensity or weight, number of sets, dehydration, fatigue, environmental heat, caffeine intake, or prior smoking history (former smokers may have slightly reduced HRR compared to never-smokers due to prior effects, but long-term cessation, e.g., 15+ years for light smokers, often allows near-full recovery to non-smoker norms). Recent advancements in wearable technology have extended HRR assessment to mental health contexts, revealing associations with anxiety disorders. A 2024 study using wearable devices to monitor heart rate variability during and after exercise found that slower HRR in college students predicted higher anxiety and depression levels, suggesting reduced autonomic flexibility in these conditions. This non-invasive application highlights HRR's potential as a biomarker for psychophysiological stress beyond traditional fitness evaluation.

Developmental Changes

The normal fetal heart rate ranges from 110 to 160 beats per minute (bpm), reflecting the developing cardiovascular system's adaptation to conditions. This rate supports efficient oxygen delivery via the and remains relatively stable throughout , though it can vary with and fetal activity. Immediately after birth, the heart rate typically decreases to a range of 100 to 205 bpm in healthy term newborns as the opens and oxygenation shifts to the lungs, reducing the prior reliance on fetal shunts. This transition, driven by the first breath and increased oxygen levels, stabilizes the rate within minutes, with median values often reaching 120 to 140 bpm by 10 minutes post-delivery in vigorous infants. In the neonatal period and during infancy (up to 12 months), the rate remains elevated compared to older children, with normal resting heart rates (when awake and not exercising) typically ranging from 100 to 205 bpm for newborns (birth to 4 weeks) and 100 to 180 bpm for older infants (4 weeks to 1 year). These rates are lower during sleep and higher during activity; during crying, agitation, or labored breathing, it can briefly rise to 180 to 220 bpm as a physiological compensatory response to maintain oxygenation, influenced by immature autonomic regulation. During childhood and adolescence, resting heart rate undergoes a gradual decline, from approximately 80 to 130 bpm in toddlers (ages 1 to 3 years) to 60 to 100 bpm in teenagers (ages 13 to 17 years), paralleling somatic growth, increased cardiac output efficiency, and maturation of parasympathetic tone. This decrease, about 10 to 20 bpm over the period, is attributed to reduced sympathetic dominance and enhanced vagal activity as the body adapts to higher physical demands and metabolic needs. Factors such as physical activity levels and overall fitness further modulate this trajectory, with active children exhibiting lower rates within the normative range. In adulthood, resting heart rate stabilizes at a typical range of 60 to 100 bpm, with an optimal range of 60 to 80 bpm in healthy individuals, through the 50s, serving as a benchmark for cardiovascular , though it shows minimal change with aging due to balanced autonomic adjustments. Beyond age 60, rates may exhibit slight elevations in some individuals from reduced vascular compliance and autonomic shifts, but population studies indicate overall stability, with very elderly individuals (including centenarians) often maintaining medians around 68 to 70 bpm. Sex-specific patterns emerge early, with females displaying 2 to 7 bpm higher rates in and due to smaller heart size and , necessitating faster beats for equivalent output; these differences diminish after age 50 as hormonal and structural factors converge. Recent longitudinal investigations using pediatric wearables have highlighted resting heart rate and variability as early indicators of future cardiovascular health. Recent 2024-2025 studies validate wearable accuracy for heart rate monitoring in pediatric populations with heart disease, supporting their use in tracking developmental cardiovascular health and predicting risks such as .

Heart Rate During Walking

Heart rate during walking varies based on intensity, with typical ranges for a healthy 25-year-old male estimated using age-adjusted maximum heart rate formulas such as 220 minus age (yielding approximately 195 bpm). For casual or slow walking, rates generally fall between 90 and 120 bpm, corresponding to light activity at 50-60% of maximum heart rate. Moderate to brisk walking elevates the rate to 100-140 bpm (about 60-70% of maximum), while brisk walking for exercise can reach 120-140 bpm or higher (70-80% of maximum or more). These ranges depend on factors such as pace, fitness level, terrain, and overall health; fitter individuals often exhibit lower heart rates for the same level of effort due to improved cardiovascular efficiency.

Measurement Techniques

Manual Assessment

Manual assessment of heart rate involves traditional techniques to detect peripheral pulses or for direct cardiac sounds, serving as foundational methods in clinical evaluations. The at the wrist is the most common site for palpation, where the tips of the index and middle fingers are placed between the wrist bone and the on the thumb side to feel the pulsations; light is applied to avoid compressing the artery and altering the flow. The in the , located in the groove beside the windpipe, can also be used, employing the index and long fingers with gentle on one side only to prevent reduced cerebral . Pulses are typically counted for 15, 30, or 60 seconds using a timepiece, with the count multiplied by 4, 2, or 1, respectively, to yield beats per minute (bpm); shorter intervals like 15 or 30 seconds are suitable for regular rhythms but may introduce minor inaccuracies of less than 1.5 bpm compared to when starting the count at zero. For greater precision, particularly in cases of irregular rhythms, the apical pulse is assessed by with a placed at the fifth along the midclavicular line, where the sounds are best heard; the patient should be or in a left lateral position with the chest exposed. Each "lub-dub" pair counts as one beat, and the full 60-second count is recommended to capture variations accurately, making this method superior for detecting irregularities or weak peripheral pulses that may not transmit well to arteries. Best practices emphasize consistency and preparation to minimize variability: measurements should be taken after resting for several minutes in a seated or at the same time daily, and a full 60-second count is advised for any suspected irregularity to ensure reliability. Immediately after exercise, assessment should be avoided for resting heart rate evaluation due to rapid fluctuations in rate during recovery, which can exceed 20 bpm in the first minute and lead to inaccurate readings; instead, wait until stabilization. Normal resting heart rates via these methods typically range from 60 to 100 bpm in adults. Limitations of manual assessment include inter-observer variability arising from differences in finger pressure or timing coordination, resulting in mean errors of up to 3-4 bpm in shorter counts, though generally under 1.5 bpm with proper technique. Challenges are pronounced in patients with , where excess tissue may dampen pulse detectability, or in those with weak or thready pulses from conditions like , potentially requiring alternative sites or methods. Historically, these and techniques formed the cornerstone of from ancient civilizations—such as Egyptian use of water clocks around 1550 BC and Greek measurements with clepsydra in the —through the pre-electronic era until the early , when they were the primary means for assessing heart rate in clinical settings without .

Electronic Monitoring

Electronic monitoring of heart rate relies on detecting electrical signals generated by the heart's depolarization and repolarization, providing objective and continuous measurements superior to manual palpation. Electrocardiography (ECG or EKG) is the foundational technique, using electrodes placed on the skin to capture the heart's electrical activity via leads that record voltage changes over time. The QRS complex, representing ventricular depolarization, serves as the primary marker for heart rate calculation; in a standard 12-lead ECG, the rate in beats per minute (bpm) is determined by counting the number of QRS complexes in a 6-second rhythm strip and multiplying by 10, or in a 10-second strip by multiplying by 6. This method yields precise bpm values, typically within 60-100 bpm for adults at rest, enabling detection of deviations like bradycardia or tachycardia. For extended monitoring outside clinical settings, Holter monitors offer ambulatory ECG recording, capturing continuous data for 24 to 48 hours while patients perform daily activities. These portable devices, consisting of patches connected to a small recorder worn on a belt or , detect QRS complexes and R-R intervals (the time between consecutive QRS peaks) to compute heart rate and identify intermittent irregularities not evident in short ECG sessions. Holter monitoring is particularly valuable for diagnosing paroxysmal arrhythmias, with data analyzed post-recording using software that quantifies average, minimum, and maximum heart rates over the period. Chest strap monitors, another electrical-based system, employ dry or wet electrodes embedded in an adjustable strap positioned across the chest to sense the heart's bioelectric potentials, similar to a single-lead ECG. These devices measure R-R intervals directly, calculating heart rate by dividing 60 seconds by the average interval length, achieving high accuracy comparable to clinical ECGs, often within ±1-2 bpm during exercise or rest. Widely used in fitness and , chest straps transmit data wirelessly via or ANT+ to receivers like smartphones or , supporting real-time bpm display and analysis. In clinical applications, electronic monitoring facilitates , where ECG leads track heart rate responses to progressive exercise on a or , revealing ischemic changes or rate limits. telemetry systems extend this by continuously monitoring multiple patients' electrical signals from bedside units to a central station, alerting staff to rate abnormalities via automated detection of QRS patterns. Noise filtering algorithms are integral, employing bandpass filters to suppress artifacts from motion or muscle activity (typically 0.5-40 Hz for ECG signals) and adaptive techniques like transforms to isolate true QRS complexes, ensuring reliable bpm readings even in dynamic environments. Advancements in implantable loop recorders (ILRs), such as Medtronic's Reveal series, represent 2025 standards for long-term electronic monitoring, with devices subcutaneously inserted under to provide continuous ECG recording for up to three years or more. These loop recorders automatically detect and store episodes by analyzing R-R intervals and QRS morphology, with patient-activated events for symptomatic correlation; recent models incorporate remote reprogramming and cloud-based analysis to reduce false positives to under 25% through refined algorithms. ILRs are indicated for unexplained syncope or cryptogenic , offering diagnostic yields exceeding 30% for within two years of implantation.

Optical and Wearable Methods

Photoplethysmography (PPG) is a non-invasive optical technique widely used in wearable devices to monitor heart rate by detecting volumetric changes in blood flow through light absorption and reflection. PPG sensors employ light-emitting diodes (LEDs), typically emitting green, red, or infrared wavelengths, directed at peripheral tissues such as the wrist, finger, or , where photodetectors capture the modulated light signal influenced by arterial pulsations. This method allows for unobtrusive, continuous measurement without the need for electrical contacts, distinguishing it from traditional . In consumer wearables like the Apple Watch and Fitbit trackers, PPG forms the core of heart rate monitoring, enabling real-time tracking during daily activities and exercise. These devices process the PPG waveform to extract heart rate via algorithms such as peak detection, which identifies successive pulse peaks to compute beats per minute, often achieving accuracy within ±5 bpm of electrocardiography (ECG) at rest with agreement rates exceeding 89% in validation studies. However, motion artifacts from arm movement or poor sensor-skin contact can degrade performance during dynamic conditions, reducing reliability to below 80% in some scenarios, though adaptive filtering helps mitigate this. Beyond basic heart rate, PPG-enabled wearables facilitate (HRV) analysis by deriving inter-beat intervals from the pulse waveform, offering metrics like of successive differences (RMSSD) for assessing autonomic balance and stress levels. This continuous data integrates with companion apps, providing user alerts for elevated or irregular rates and personalized insights into cardiovascular trends over time. Advancements in have focused on multi-wavelength PPG systems, which combine , , and lights to enhance signal quality across diverse skin tones, addressing biases where darker pigmentation previously increased measurement errors by up to 10-20% due to greater light attenuation. Concurrently, artificial intelligence-driven , using models to separate physiological signals from noise, has improved accuracy during activity by 15-25% in recent prototypes, promoting broader inclusivity and reliability in everyday monitoring.

Clinical Relevance

Tachycardia and Bradycardia

refers to a heart rate exceeding 100 beats per minute (bpm) in adults at rest, sustained over a period that warrants clinical attention. This condition contrasts with the typical resting heart rate range of 60 to 100 bpm. It can arise from physiological responses or underlying , and while occasional episodes may be benign, persistent often requires evaluation to identify the cause. Sinus tachycardia, a common physiological type, occurs when the heart's natural pacemaker (sinoatrial node) drives the elevated rate, often due to triggers like fever, exercise, or stress. In contrast, (SVT) represents a pathological form originating above the ventricles, such as in , where abnormal electrical signals create rapid, erratic rhythms. Common causes of tachycardia include , which reduces oxygen-carrying capacity and prompts compensatory acceleration, and , which decreases and stresses . Symptoms of tachycardia may include palpitations, a sensation of rapid or pounding heartbeat, shortness of breath, dizziness, or chest pain, particularly when the rate surpasses 150 bpm at rest. Medical care should be sought promptly if the heart rate remains above 150 bpm at rest or if symptoms like fainting or severe chest discomfort occur, as these may signal hemodynamic instability. Bradycardia is defined as a heart rate below 60 bpm in adults at rest, though it may be asymptomatic in certain contexts. This slower rhythm can reflect efficient cardiac function or indicate dysfunction, depending on the underlying mechanism and presence of symptoms. Sinus bradycardia, often benign, is frequently observed in well-conditioned athletes due to enhanced vagal tone and cardiovascular efficiency. However, sick sinus syndrome exemplifies a pathological variant, where the sinoatrial node malfunctions, leading to persistent slow rates and symptoms such as dizziness or fatigue. Causes include medications like beta-blockers, which inhibit sympathetic stimulation to slow conduction, and hypothyroidism, where reduced thyroid hormone levels diminish metabolic demand and cardiac excitability. Symptoms of symptomatic bradycardia typically involve fatigue, weakness, dizziness, lightheadedness, or fainting, arising from inadequate to meet bodily needs. Individuals should seek medical evaluation if these symptoms accompany a heart rate below 50-60 bpm, especially with confusion or , to rule out reversible or progressive causes.

Arrhythmias and Irregularities

Arrhythmias represent disruptions in the normal rhythm of the heart, leading to irregular heartbeats that can affect the overall heart rate and its variability. Common types include (AFib), characterized by rapid and irregular atrial contractions resulting in ventricular rates typically ranging from 100 to 175 beats per minute, and (VT), a potentially life-threatening condition where the ventricles beat at rates exceeding 120 beats per minute for more than a few seconds. These irregularities can compromise and increase the risk of complications such as . Heart rate variability (HRV) refers to the physiological fluctuation in the time intervals between consecutive heartbeats, reflecting the balance between sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system influences. Normal HRV includes benign variations like respiratory sinus arrhythmia, where heart rate increases during inhalation and decreases during exhalation due to vagal modulation. Reduced HRV, however, serves as a marker of stress or autonomic dysfunction, assessed through time-domain measures such as the standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals (SDNN), which quantifies overall variability over a period like 24 hours, or frequency-domain analyses that differentiate low-frequency (sympathetic) and high-frequency (parasympathetic) components. Detection of arrhythmias like AFib often relies on (ECG), which reveals characteristic features such as absent P waves and irregularly irregular R-R intervals, indicating disorganized atrial activity without coordinated atrial . AFib carries significant risks, including a fivefold increased likelihood of due to blood in the atria promoting clot formation. Recent research highlights HRV's role in , with 2023 systematic reviews indicating that low HRV in conditions like depression stems from autonomic imbalance, particularly reduced parasympathetic activity, suggesting its potential as a for psychiatric vulnerability.

Associations with Cardiovascular Risk

Elevated resting heart rate (RHR) is a well-established independent predictor of cardiovascular mortality, with demonstrating a dose-response relationship. For instance, individuals with an RHR exceeding 80 beats per minute (bpm) face approximately a 45% higher risk of all-cause mortality compared to those with rates below 60 bpm, and this association extends to cardiovascular-specific outcomes such as coronary heart disease and . A comprehensive 2017 and dose-response of prospective studies further quantified this risk, showing that each 10 bpm increase in RHR correlates with a 15% elevated (RR) of mortality (95% CI: 1.11-1.18), independent of traditional risk factors like age and . This predictive value underscores RHR as a simple, non-invasive marker for long-term cardiovascular . Heart rate variability (HRV), particularly reduced measures like standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals (SDNN), provides additional prognostic insight, especially following acute (MI). Low HRV, defined as SDNN below 50 ms, identifies patients at significantly heightened risk of adverse outcomes, with a of 3.0 for total mortality (95% CI: 1.5-5.9) and 2.6 for cardiovascular mortality (95% CI: 1.3-5.3) in the post-fibrinolytic era. This reduction in HRV reflects autonomic imbalance, which has been linked to increased susceptibility to arrhythmic events after MI, as evidenced by seminal studies showing depressed HRV as a powerful indicator of sudden cardiac death and major arrhythmic complications. Such metrics enable risk stratification in post-MI care, guiding closer monitoring for high-risk individuals. Elevated heart rate also plays a mechanistic role in hypertension-related cardiovascular damage, promoting and accelerating plaque formation. Chronic increases on vascular walls, impairing production and fostering , which contributes to progression and plaque instability. Reviews highlight that heart rates above typical resting levels exacerbate these processes in hypertensive patients, independently raising the risk of coronary events through enhanced and lipid accumulation in arterial walls. This interplay positions heart rate as a modifiable factor in the hypertensive cascade toward . Recent cohort studies emphasize the prognostic importance of nocturnal heart rate patterns, where non-dipping (failure to decrease by at least 10% during ) is associated with increased cardiovascular risk; for example, non-dipping heart rate has been associated with a 2.4-fold increase in incident , independent of blood pressure dipping status. Wearable devices have emerged as tools for early intervention by capturing these patterns; a 2025 cross-sectional analysis of over 6,900 participants using data found that elevated daily heart rate per step—a composite metric—strongly predicts conditions like (OR: 1.63, 95% CI: 1.32-2.02) and (OR: 1.77, 95% CI: 1.00-3.14), outperforming isolated heart rate or activity measures for timely risk detection and management.

Heart Rate in Disease Management

In management, often targets heart rate to alleviate symptoms and improve outcomes. Beta-blockers, such as metoprolol, are first-line agents for rate control in and (AFib), where they block β-1 adrenergic receptors to reduce ventricular rate by approximately 12 beats per minute (bpm). This reduction helps mitigate tachycardia-related complications like reduced cardiac efficiency. In with reduced , serves as an adjunct for rate control, particularly in AFib, by enhancing parasympathetic tone and slowing atrioventricular (AV) nodal conduction, thereby improving ventricular response and without significantly altering . Device-based interventions address persistent heart rate abnormalities unresponsive to medications. Pacemakers are implanted for symptomatic , defined as a heart rate below 40 bpm associated with symptoms such as , , or syncope, ensuring appropriate pacing to maintain hemodynamic stability. For tachyarrhythmias like , destroys aberrant electrical circuits using radiofrequency energy, reducing recurrence rates by more than 75% and normalizing heart rate in the majority of patients with structural heart disease. Lifestyle strategies complement medical therapies by promoting sustainable heart rate improvements. Regular aerobic exercise, such as brisk walking or cycling performed for 30-45 minutes most days, can lower resting heart rate by 5-10 bpm over several months through enhanced parasympathetic activity and cardiac efficiency. In diabetes management, continuous heart rate monitoring via wearable devices or Holter electrocardiography detects early signs of autonomic neuropathy, where resting tachycardia (90-100 bpm) signals parasympathetic dysfunction, enabling timely interventions to prevent progression to severe cardiovascular events. Clinical guidelines emphasize heart rate targets to optimize therapy. The (AHA) recommends beta-blockers post-myocardial (MI) in patients with reduced left ventricular function, aiming for a resting heart rate below 70 bpm to reduce mortality and hospitalization risks. (HRV) , involving guided breathing exercises to increase HRV at resonance frequency (around 6 breaths per minute), is incorporated for stress-related disorders like anxiety and , fostering autonomic balance and reducing sympathetic overdrive. Advancements in 2025 have integrated for dynamic heart rate management, enabling real-time monitoring through connected devices and AI-driven platforms to facilitate immediate therapy adjustments in patients, thereby enhancing adherence and preventing acute decompensations.

References

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