MASARYK UNIVERSITY • FACULTY OF MEDICINE BRNO • CZECH REPUBLIC SYMPOSIUM NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Edited by: HALBERG F., KENNER T., SIEGELOVA J. BRNO 2011 The Symposium takes place under the auspices of Doc. PhDr. Mikuláš Bek, Ph.D., Rector of Masaryk University Brno Prof. MUDr. Jiří Mayer, CSc, Dean of Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Brno Ing. Petr Koška, MBA, Director of The St. Anna Teaching Hospital in Brno Reviewed by: Prof. MUDr. Z. Placheta, DrSc. ©2011 Masarykova univerzita ISBN 978-80-210-5672-5 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 CONTENTS 1. Siegelova Jarmila PROF. MUDR. BOHUMIL FISER, CSC.....................................................................................5 2. Siegelova Jarmila PROFESSOR JEAN - PAUL MARTINEAUD............................................................................8 3. Kenner Thomas A REVIEW OF CONTINUOUS RECORDING OF BLOOD DENSITY AND OF CIRCADIAN VARIATION OF BLOOD DENSITY............................................................28 4. Halberg Franz, Cornelissen Germaine, Schwartzkopff Othild, Khalilov Elchin, Khalilov Tamila, Damirov Fuad, Wang Zhengrong, Watanabe Yoshihiko, Otsuka Kuniaki, Siegelova Jarmila, Al-Abdulgader Abdulah A. PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY CONCERNS AVOIDANCE OF PERSONAL AND SOCIETAL HEALTH-RELATED AND NATURAL CATACLYSMS.......................................33 5. Halberg Franz, Cornelissen Germaine, Hillman Dewayne, Ilyia Elias, Cegielski Ning, El-Khoury Maroun, Finley Judy, Thomas Faithe, Brandes Vera, Kino Tomoshige, Pappadopoulo Anna, Chrousos George P., Costella John F., Mikulecky Miroslav MULTIPLE CIRCADIAN PERIODS IN A LADY WITH RECURRING EPISODES OF ADYNAMIC DEPRESSION: CASE REPORT.........................................................................45 6. Halberg Franz, Cornelissen Germaine, Best William R., Hillman Dewayne, Schwartzkopff Othild INFRADIANS IN HUMAN BLOOD PRESSURE, HEART RATE AND BODY WEIGHT DURING 35 YEARS OF AGING...............................................................................................68 7. Cornelissen Germaine, Halberg Franz, Schwartzkopff Othild, Siegelova Jarmila, Dusek Jiri, Singh RB BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART RATE VARIABILITY GAUGING HEALTH, THE MIND, LOADS AND HUMAN AFFAIRS (ASSESSED BY A SYSTEM FOR A CHRONOBIOLOGICALLY-INTERPRETED ABPM REPLACING THE BLOOD PRESSURE CUFF IN PROVIDERS' OFFICES)......................................................................83 8. Cornelissen Germaine, Gumarova Lyazzat, Halberg Franz AN 11-YEAR CYCLE IN MATERNAL MORTALITY?........................................................116 9. Sello Stefano, Halberg Franz, Cornelissen Germaine HUMAN BABIES: A SLOW-TO-READ, SENSITIVE POPULATION MAGNETOMETER, ALSO READ BY WAVELETS.................................................................................................123 3 10. De Meester Fabien, Wilczyňska Agnieszka, Singh Ram B, Wilson Douglas W, Pella Daniel, Fedacko Jan, Siegelova Jarmila, Fišer Bohumil, Galii Claudio, Cornelissen Germaine, Halberg Franz THE CHRONOMICS TRIAL: REPORT OF A 3-MONTH PILOT STUDY...........................141 11. Siegelova Jarmila, Fišer Bohumil, Dobsak Petr, Dušek Jiri, Pohanka Michal, Cornelissen Germaine, Halberg Franz SEVEN DAY AMBULATORY BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING: AMBULATORY ARTERIAL STIFFNESS INDEX PATIENTS AFTER INFARCTUS OF MYOCARDIUM.....162 12. Schmidt-Trucksass Arno MEASUREMENT OF VASCULAR FUNCTION BY CARDIO ANKLE VASCULAR INDEX - THEORY, REPRODUCIBILITY AND AGING................................173 13. Konečný Petr, Elfmark Milam, Urbánek Karel, Siegelova Jarmila EFFECTS OF OROFACIAL REHABILITATION AFTER STROKE.....................................176 14. Konečný Lumir, Kocourkova Jana, Siegelova Jarmila, Dobsak Petr, Kohzuki Masahiro DEVELOPMENT OF BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENT...................................................................................................................................181 15. Dobsak Petr, Shirai K, Pochmonova Jaroslava, Homolka Pavel, Vitovec Jiri, Spinarova Lenka, Novákova Marie, Jarkovsky Jiri, Eicher Jean Christoph, Wolf Jean Eric ASSESSMENT OF ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN PATIENTS WITH CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES: EFFECTS OF EXERCISE TRAINING AND ELECTROMYOSTFMULATION...................................................................................185 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Prof. MUDr. Bohumil Fišer, CSc. (22.10.1943 - 21.3.2011) Prof. Bohumil Fišer was Head of the Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno 1995-2008, Minister of Health in the Czech Republic in 2000-2002, member of executive committee of WHO 2003-2008, was a highly regarded scientist of worldwide renown in the field of normal and pathological physiology and a successful organizer in health service. During his studies at the Faculty of Medicine of Masaryk University he had been working in the Institute of Medical Physics and later Physiology where he extended his considerable knowledge of physics and mathematics; that became a basis for his further activities, mainly in the research of cardiovascular system. After his graduation in 1966 he acquired a valuable medical experience in surgery in the course of his military service (1967-1968). Then he continued his scientific and teaching activities in the Department of Physiology as a lecturer and since 1989 as a senior lecturer. He was appointed a professor in 1995; at that time he was already Head of the Department of Physiology at Masaryk University in Brno. The scientific and publication activities of professor Fišer, started in 1966 in cooperation with professor Jan Peňáz, were concentrated on frequency analysis of blood pressure oscillations in rabbits. The oscillations of cardiovascular variables were studied in man, also using direct recording of blood pressure in a. brachialis. These experiments using exact original methods of frequency analysis brought the evidence of the ten-second rhythm in heart rate in man. Together with professor Semrád he performed the analysis of pulse pressure and pulse interval in patients with atrial fibrillation, using various mathematical methods and method of Monte Carlo including the heart rate rhythm regulation of heart contractility in man. The study of heart contractility in man confirmed the findings of contractility regulation in isolated heart experiments discovered by professor Vladislav Kruta, professor Pavel Bravený and others co-authors from the same physiological department. His scientific work from the studies mentioned above was finished by CSc. thesis in 1978. He also contributed to the first clinical measurement of cardiac output and first electrophysiological examination of the human heart in St. Anna Teaching Hospital together with professor Bořivoj Semrád, professor Karel Zeman and senior lecturer Josef Sumbera. Further studies analysed the interrelationships between heart rate fluctuations and blood pressure fluctuations using autocorrelation functions and power spectral densities. In 1978 the first description of coherence between pulse interval and systolic 5 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 blood pressure was published. Heart rate oscillations in frequency domaine 0.1 Hz were analyzed. These findings are fundamental in determination of baroreflex sensitivity in man. His studies aimed at assessing baroreflex sensitivity continued with the development of another non-invasive method of determination baroreflex sensitivity. Sudden decrease of blood pressure of about 10 to 20 mmHg, evoked by out-flow of blood into vasodilated lower extremities after 5 minutes occlusion, brought about baroreflex-mediated blood pressure changes and changes in cardiac interval. Changes of cardiac interval, monitored beat-to-beat, were used for measurement of baroreflex sensitivity. The new developed method allowed further hemodynamic studies in healthy subjects and clinical examinations, done together with professor Jarmila Siegelová, in patients with essential hypertension. The results of his scientific work professor B. Fišer published in numerous monographs, in experimental original papers and in several pedagogical texts both in his country and in India, Hungary,Germany, Italy, France, Great Britan, Austria and USA. Partial results were given at many scientific meetings. International cooperation of professor B. Fišer in science and research could be fully extended only after the velvet revolution in 1989. The cooperation with professeur Jean-Paul Martineaud, Medical Faculty, Lariboisiére Hospital, University de Paris (France) was very intensively developed and the common hemodynamic studies were provided as a non-invasive measurement of aortic compliance and blood flow regulation in cerebral arteries, both in healthy subjects and patients, and published in international journals. At the same time, the cooperation with professor Franz Halberg and with professor Germaine Cornelissen, Halberg Chronobiology Center of the University of Minnesota (USA) started. Further studies of circadian variability of cardiovascular variables and baroreflex sensitivity were published in many papers as the result of this common work. In 1995 he was invited as a distinguished scientist for a lecture to the Supercomputer Institute of University of Minnesota (USA) and presented there the paper about the use of supercomputers in prevention of stroke and cardiac death. The international cooperation continued with professor Thomas Kenner, from the Department of Physiology in University in Graz (Austria), where the original studies of heart rate variability, baroreflex sensitivity and chronobiology have been realized and included in the common international project of analysis of cardiovascular control in physiology and pathophysiology. From 1989 professor B. Fišer in cooperation with professor J. Siegelová organized on Medical Faculty Masaryk University international symposia MEFA and from 2002 every year on Medical Faculty Masaryk University Symposia. Every year were published books, edited by professors F. Halberg, T. Kenner, B. Fišer and J. Siegelová ( Chronobiology 1996, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 1999, The importance of chronobiology in diagnosing and therapy of internal medicine 2002, Chronobiological analysis in pathophysiology of cardiovascular system 2003, Chronobiology in medicine 2004, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2006, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2007, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2008, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2009, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2010). Scientific, medical, and organization capabilities of professor B. Fišer were appreciated by a number of awards, citations and memberships in scientific and health organizations and institutions. Professor Fišer was a member of a range of international scientific societies such as International Society of Physiology, French Physiological Society (Societé de Physiologie Francaise), as well as Czech Physiological Society. He participated in many international physiological congresses, symposia and workshops, some of them also organized by him. He was invited to many lectures concerning cardiovascular control mechanisms in France, United Kingdom, Austria and USA. In our republic, he was a member of International Grant Agency of Ministry of Health from 1995 to 2000 and of Grant 6 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Agency of the Czech Republic. In 2000, he was nominated in the function of Minister of Health of the Czech Republic. In this position he was very successful and everybody esteemed his activity in the government. In 2002 he returned to Masaryk University and was in the head position until 2008, and as aprofessor continued until 21.3.2011. In 2003, he became aMember of Executive Board ofWHO (World Health Organization) until 2008. Noble personal qualities of professor Fiser include not only an extraordinary diligence, but also modesty and tolerance, almost permanent good mood and friendly relation to people. He was always ready to give advice and assistance to younger colleagues to whom he imparts his extensive scientific, research and pedagogical experience. In Department of Physiology he educated from his younger coo-workers two professors of physiology, three senior lectures and a lot of Ph.D. graduated students. His productive life was filled mainly with professional work and with work which was of benefit to the public. His untimely death notwithstanding, he will be with us in spirit in our efforts to change a medicine based on a number of diagnoses to an objective assessment of many novel rhythm and other variability alterations in cardiovascular parameters. Thereby, health care can change from one based on sheer intuition and hard-to-define experience listing a number of diagnoses to an objective assessment of many novel biological rhythms. Prof. Franz Halberg, M.D., Dr. h. c. multi and prof. MUDr. Bohumil Fišer, CSc. In Brno during symposium Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2003. Prof. MUDr. Jarmila Siegelová, DrSc. Head, Dept. of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Kamenice 5 625 00 Brno 7 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Professor Jean-Paul Martineaud (*27.3.1931-f29.11.2010) Prof. Dr. Jean-Paul Martineaud, Head Emeritus of the Dept. of Physiology and Dept. of Non invasive Clinical Investigation at the Lariboisiere Hospital, University Paris Diderot VI, Teaching Hospitals C.H.U. Lariboisiere and Saint-Louis, Paris, France. He studied at the University of Paris, Medical School where he was graduated in 1963. Professor Martineaud's research interest included pathophysiology and fundamental research in cardiovascular system, pathophysiology of temperature control, pathophysiology of exercise, sports medicine and cardiology. His second field of interest was history of medicine. 8 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Prof. J.P. Martineaud, was the Head of the Dept. of Physiology and Dept. of Non invasive Clinical Investigation at the Lariboisiěre Hospital, University Paris Diderot VI, Teaching Hospitals C.H.U. Lariboisiěre and Saint-Louis from 1968 to 1996. During this period, he developed the medical service in the Dept. of Non invasive clinical investigations including the diagnostic in the fields of cardiology, angiology, pneumology, ergometry, spiroergometry at the highest scientific level. He was an excellent clinician and was highly appraised from other heads of clinics. When teaching physiology, he was a very good lecturer, with a lot of latest findings in the science. During his long working period he published a lot of original scientific papers. The figure presents the staff of Dept. of Non invasive Clinical Investigation at the Lariboisiěre Hospital in December 1995. In the 1st row sitting there are Dr. Philippe Bonnin, Dr. Antoni Kedra, Prof. Dr. Jean-Paul Marineaud and Dr. Olivier Baillart, in the 2nd row on the fifth position Prof. J. Siegelova, in the 4th row on the first position Dr. Etienne Savin, on the third position Prof. Dr. B. Fiser. Prof. Dr. Jean-Paul Martineaud, as a professor emeritus, worked in the Dept. of Non invasive Clinical Investigation at the Lariboisiěre Hospital under guidance of the successive Head, prof. Dr. Bernard Levy from 1996 to 2011. During this long working period he educated generations of medical doctors in France and abroad. Prof. Martineaud and his scientific team has cooperated with Dept. of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Dakar-Fann, Senegal and National Institute of Sports and Education of Senegal, Senegal. The physiological measurements were done under his guidance in hot climate in Senegal and published together with Prof. Dr. Cissé and Prof. Dr. Samb. Prof. Martineaud and his scientific team collaborated with University of Tirana, Albania where he and Dr. P. Bonnin have supported, for 15 years, the contemporary education and knowledge in physiology for students of medicine with the help of an European project of teaching. The longest cooperation was with the Dept. of Physiology in Brno, Masaryk University (at that time Purkyne). Prof. Martineaud started to work in Brno in 1976 with prof. Vladislav Kruta (1909-1977), prof. B. Fiser and prof. J. Siegelova. This cooperation continued for many years. He visited a lot of scientific meetings in Prague, Brno, Bratislava before the revolution in 1989. After the revolution he had been visiting Brno every year until 2005. Prof. J.P. Marineaud acted in Brno as an excellent scientist; he discussed the cardiovascular research regularly with prof. Franz Halberg from University of Minnesota, USA, prof. Thomas Kenner from Graz, Austria and with the Brno team, prof. Bohumil Fiser, prof. J. Siegelova and Dr. Jiri Dusek. Prof. B. Fiser and Prof. J. Siegelova also visited many times Dept. Physiology, Paris and they worked in the position of scientific visitors in Paris. Prof. Martineaud sent also from Paris to Brno Dr. E. Savin many times to Masaryk University to pursue common experimental studies resulting in common research projects. In Brno prof. Martineaud presented every year new results in cardiovascular research, sometimes also in cooperation with the University of Senegal. Prof. Martineaud received several Awards, Medal of Medical Faculty of Masaryk University in 1995 and the "Prix de 1'essai" in 1998 from the "Societě d'-Histoire des Hópitaux". Prof. J.P. Marineaud was a physiologist, scientist and teacher par excellence. He was an extremely busy and productive scientist, clinician and excellent organizer of medical clinical service. His list of his publications is attached. We should never forget that the historical progress in science and medicine was achieved also due to the work of Prof. Dr. J.P. Martineaud. 9 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 REFERENCES Science citation report: 1. Title: Exercise training in patients with chronic coronary artery disease: Baroreflex sensitivity and heart rate variability Author(s): Siegelova J, Jancik J, Svacinova H, et al. 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Title: NONINVASIVE MEASUREMENT OF CARDIAC-OUTPUT WITH PULSED DOPPLER ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY - COMPARISON WITH FICK PROCEDURE Author(s): STRAUSS AL, KEDRA AW, PAYEN DM, et al. Source: HERZ Volume: 11 Issue: 5 Pages: 269-276 Published: OCT 1986 Times Cited: 5 32. Title: EFFECTS OF BEPRIDIL ON VENOUS COMPLIANCE IN A DOUBLE-BLIND CONTROLLED RANDOMIZED CROSS OVER STUDY Author(s): BAILLIART O, TESSERAM, MARTINEAUD JP, et al. Source: THERAPIE Volume: 41 Issue: 5 Pages: 385-390 Published: SEP-OCT 1986 33. Title: BLOOD-FLOW OF THE LIMBS AND OF THE CEPHALIC EXTREMITY IN ADULTS OF BOTH SEXES Author(s): BONNIN P, SAVIN E, STRAUSS A, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 81 Issue: 2 Pages: Al-Al Published: 1986 34. Title: CONTROL OF VASOMOTRICITY OF THE HAND - COMPARISON BETWEEN TEST SUBJECTS AND THOSE AFFLICTED WITH RAYNAUDS PHENOMENA Author(s): SAVIN E, REDRAW, OLIVAI, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 81 Issue: 2 Pages: A4-A5 Published: 1986 3 5. Title: VARIATIONS OF ARTERIAL-PRESSUREDUE TO EXERCISEIN THE HYPERTENSIVE BEFORE AND AFTER BETAXOLOL (KERLONE) TREATMENT Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, BAILLIART O, KEDRA A, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHARMACOLOGIE Volume: 17 Issue: 2 Pages: 194-194 Published: APR-JUN 1986 36. Title: ULTRASONIC MEASUREMENT OF CARDIAC DEFICIENCY AND PERIPHERAL DEFICIENCIES DURING DYNAMIC AND STATIC MUSCULAR EXERCISE 13 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Author(s): STRAUSS A, SAVIN E, BONNIN P, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 80 Issue: 5 Pages: A60-A60 Published: 1985 37. Title: QUANTITATIVE DOPPLER BLOOD-FLOW MEASUREMENT METHOD AND INVIVO CALIBRATION Author(s): CHAUVEAU M, LEVY B, DESSANGES JF, et al. Source: CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH Volume: 19 Issue: 11 Pages: 700-706 Published: 1985 Times Cited: 42 38. Title: INTERESTS AND LIMITATIONS OF THE USE OF PULSED DOPPLER EMISSION VELOCIMETRY Author(s): BAILLIART O, PONSIN JC, LEVY B, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE BIOPHYSIQUE ET DE BIOMECANIQUE Volume: 9 Issue: 4 Pages: 318-319 Published: 1985 Times Cited: 3 39. Title: NONINVASIVE AND INVASIVE BLOOD FLOWMETRY IN HEMODIALYZED PATIENTS WITH HIGH BLOOD-FLOW FISTULAS Author(s): LEVY BI, BOURQUELOT P, PONSIN JC, et al. Source: TRANSACTIONS AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR ARTIFICIAL INTERNAL ORGANS Volume: 30 Pages: 335-337 Published: 1984 Times Cited: 3 40. Title: DETERMINATION OF NASAL RESISTANCE BY 2 RHINOMANOMETRY TECHNIQUES IN NORMAL MAN Author(s): GHAEM A, MARTINEAUD JP Source: BULLETIN EUROPEEN DE PHYSIOPATHOLOGIE RESPIRATOIRE-CLINICAL RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 21 Issue: 1 Pages: 11-16 Published: 1985 Times Cited: 22 41. Title: HUMERAL SANGUINEOUS FLOW AFTERMODIFIC ATION OF THE TEMPERATURE OF THE HAND, IN FREE CIRCULATION AND DURING POST-ISCHEMIC HYPEREMIA Author(s): FARZA A, SAVIN E, BAILLIART O, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 79 Issue: 5 Pages: A75-A75 Published: 1984 42. Title: VALUE OF FUNCTIONAL VASCULAR EXPLORATION IN TRANS-LUMINAL ANGIOPLASTY FOR PATIENTS WITH OBLITERATING ARTERIOPATHY OF THE LOWER-LIMBS Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, BAILLIART O, KEDRA AW Source: ANNALES DE CARDIOLOGIE ET D ANGEIOLOGIE Volume: 33 Issue: 2 Pages: 75-81 Published: 1984 43. Title: INTERSUBJECT VARIABILITY IN GROWTH-HORMONE TIME COURSE DURING DIFFERENT TYPES OF WORK Author(s): RAYNAUD J, CAPDEROU A, MARTINEAUD JP, et al. Source: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 55 Issue: 6 Pages: 1682-1687 Published: 1983 Times Cited: 43 44. Title: MEASUREMENT OF THE FLOW IN THE HUMERAL ARTERY DURING POST-ISCHEMIC HYPERHEMIA Author(s): SAVIN E, BAILLIART O, REDRAW, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 78 Issue: 5 Pages: A45-A45 Published: 1982 14 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 45. Title: ARTERIAL-DISEASE IN THE LOWER-LIMBS .2. PATHO-PHYSIOLOGY, CLINICAL EXAMINATION AND THE PRINCIPLES OF THE DETECTION OF ARTERIAL OCCLUSIONS Author(s): BAILLIART O, LEVY B, MARTINEAUD JP Source: REVUE DE MEDECINE Volume: 24 Issue: 7 Pages: 285-290 Published: 1983 Times Cited: 1 46. Title: ARTERIAL-DISEASE IN THE LOWER-LIMB .3. THERAPEUTIC CONSIDERATIONS AND DIFFERENT EVOLUTIVE FORMS Author(s): SENTOU Y, BAILLIART O, MARTINEAUD JP Source: REVUE DE MEDECINE Volume: 24 Issue: 7 Pages: 291-& Published: 1983 47. Title: BLOOD-FLOW IN THE ARTERIOVENOUS-FISTULA AND ITS EFFECT ON THE HEART IN PATIENTS UNDER CHRONIC-HEMODIALYSIS - 66 CASES Author(s): PONSIN JC, LEVY B, MARTINEAUD JP Source: PRESSE MEDICALE Volume: 12 Issue: 4 Pages: 217-221 Published: 1983 Times Cited: 7 48. Title: ARTERIALDISEASES OF THE LOWER-LIMB S. 1. ANATOMY, PATHO-PHYSIOLOGY AND METHODS OF INVESTIGATION Author(s): SAVIN E, BAILLIART O, MARTINEAUD JP Source: REVUE DE MEDECINE Volume: 24 Issue: 1 Pages: 19-& Published: 1983 Times Cited: 1 49. Title: EXACTNESS OF MEASUREMENTS OF BLOOD-LOSS IN FREE CIRCULATION AND FOLLOWING VEINOUS OCCLUSION Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, LEVYB Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 77 Issue: 9 Pages: A41-A41 Published: 1981 50. Title: COMPARISON OF 2 METHODS OF MEASURING ARTERIAL DEFICIT (DOPPLER ULTRASOUND VELOCFMETRY WITH IMPULSES AND ELECTROMAGNETIC DEFICIT MEASUREMENT) IN THE DOG Author(s): CHAUVEAU M, DESSANGES JF, SAVIN E, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 77 Issue: 9 Pages: A63-A63 Published: 1981 Times Cited: 1 51. Title: HAND ARTERIAL BLOOD-FLOW RESPONSES TO LOCAL VENOUS CONGESTION Author(s): LEVY BI, OLIVAY, MARTINEAUD JP Source: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 240 Issue: 6 Pages: H980-H983 Published: 1981 Times Cited: 9 52. Title: HEMODYNAMIC-EFFECTS OF PRAXINOR ON THE PERIPHERAL-CIRCULATION Author(s): OLIVAI, LEVYB, MARTINEAUD JP Source: SEMAINE DES HOPITAUX Volume: 57 Issue: 19-2 Pages: 1034-1038 Published: 1981 53. Title: DIRECT DETERMINATION OF SUPERFICIAL VEIN COMPLIANCE IN THE FOREARM Author(s): BAILLIART MMO, GHAEM A, LEVY B, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 76 Issue: 8 Pages: A41-A41 Published: 1980 54. Title: TIME COURSE OF PLASMA GROWTH-HORMONE DURING EXERCISE IN HUMANS AT ALTITUDE Author(s): RAYNAUD J, DROUET L, MARTINEAUD JP, et al. Source: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 50 Issue: 2 Pages: 229-233 15 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Published: 1981 Times Cited: 25 55. Title: EFFECTS OF HIGH-ALTITUDE HYPOXIA ON OXYGEN-TRANSPORT .2. CONSEQUENCES ON CARDIOVASCULAR AND RESPIRATORY-DISEASE Author(s): BAILLIART O, MARTINEAUD JP Source: REVUE DE MEDECINE Volume: 21 Issue: 40 Pages: 2113-& Published: 1980 56. Title: EFFECTS OF HIGH-ALTITUDE HYPOXIA ON OXYGEN-TRANSPORT .1. CONSEQUENCES ON ATHLETIC PERFORMANCE Author(s): SAVIN E, BAILLIART O, COUDERT J, et al. Source: REVUE DE MEDECINE Volume: 21 Issue: 36 Pages: 1836-& Published: 1980 57. Title: INSTANTANEOUS CHANGES IN THE RADIAL ARTERY BLOOD-FLOW UNDER DIFFERENT PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITIONS Author(s): OLIVA I, LEVY BI, MARTINEAUD JP Source: PHYSIOLOGIABOHEMOSLOVACA Volume: 29 Issue: 4Pages: 333-336Published: 1980 Times Cited: 1 58. Title: MEASUREMENT OF THE FLOW IN THE SEGMENT OF A LIMB - VALIDATION OF ULTRASONIC VELOCIMETRY USING AN IMPULSION DOPPLER-EFFECT Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, VALLADARES W, GHAEM A, et al. Source: ANNALES DE CARDIOLOGIE ET D ANGEIOLOGIE Volume: 29 Issue: 2 Pages: 117-123 Published: 1980 Times Cited: 4 59. Title: THERMOGENESIS INDUCED BY INGESTION OF DIFFERENT PROTEINS Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, RAYNAUD J, GHAEM A, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 75 Issue: 7 Pages: A60-A60 Published: 1979 60. Title: IMMOBILIZATION AND PROLONGED DECUBITUS - NOTIONS OF PHYSIOLOGY Author(s): LEVY B, BAILLIART O, MARTINEAUD JP Source: REVUE DU PRATICIEN Volume: 29 Issue: 49 Pages: 3737-& Published: 1979 Times Cited: 1 61. Title: COMPARISON OF PLETHYSMOGRAPHIC METHODS WITH PULSED DOPPLER BLOOD FLOWMETRY Author(s): LEVY BI, VALLADARES WR, GHAEM A, et al. Source: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 236 Issue: 6 Pages: H899-H903 Published: 1979 Times Cited: 49 62. Title: EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT STIMULI ON INSTANTANEOUS BLOOD-FLOW OF THE RADIAL ARTERY Author(s): OLIVA I, PONSIN JC, LEVY B, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 74 Issue: 7 Pages: A41-A41 Published: 1978 63. Title: EFFECTS OF AMBIENT AND LOCAL CUTANEOUS TEMPERATURES ON HAND BLOOD-FLOW Author(s): LEVY B, GHAEM A, VERPILL AT JM, et al. Source: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY Volume: 21 Issue: 4 Pages: 341-347 Published: 1977 Times Cited: 2 64. Title: INFLUENCE OF CENTRAL AND SURFACE-TEMPERATURE ON BLOOD-FLOW OF HAND DURING PROLONGED EXERCISES AT INCREASED AMBIANT TEMPERATURE 16 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Author(s): GHAEM A, VALLADARES W, LEVYB, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 73 Issue: 1 Pages: A41-A41 Published: 1977 65. Title: THERMAL CONTROL FACTORS FORBLOOD-FLOW IN HAND DURING PHYSICAL EXERCISE FOR LONG PERIOD Author(s): VALLADARES W, GHAEM A, LEVY B, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 72 Issue: 8 Pages: A129-A129 Published: 1977 66. Title: RESPECTIVE EFFECTS OF CENTRAL, MEAN CUTANEOUS AND LOCAL TEMPERATURES ON BLOOD-FLOW OF HAND DURING PASSIVE WARM-UP Author(s): VELILLEFOND H, GHAEM A, GUENARD H, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 72 Issue: 8 Pages: A131-A131 Published: 1977 67. Title: BODY TEMPERATURES DURING REST AND EXERCISE IN RESIDENTS AND SOJOURNERS IN HOT CLIMATE Author(s): RAYNAUD J, MARTINEAUD JP, BHATNAGAR OP, et al. Source: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY Volume: 20 Issue: 4 Pages: 309-317 Published: 1976 Times Cited: 9 68. Title: HAND BLOOD-FLOW AT REST AND DURING SUBMAXFMAL EXERCISE IN ACUTE AND CHRONIC HEAT-STRESS Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, RAYNAUD J, DUHAZE P, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 72 Issue: 2 Pages: 233-247 Published: 1976 Times Cited: 1 69. Title: ROLE OF MECHANORECEPTORS OF LIMBS IN CONTROLLING VASOMOTOR ACTIVITY OF SKIN Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, GHAEM A, VALLADARES W, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 71 Issue: 2 Pages: A339-A339 Published: 1975 70. Title: ANTAGONISTIC EFFECTS UPON CUTANEOUS CIRCULATION OF MUSCULAR EXERCISE AND EXPOSURE TO A HIGH AMBIENT-TEMPERATURE Author(s): LEVY B, GHAEM A, VERPILLAT JM, et al. Source: PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 359 Issue: 1-2 Pages: 137-146 Published: 1975 Times Cited: 1 71. Title: INDUCED CARDIOVASCULAR MODIFICATIONS BY APNEAS OF VARIOUS DURATIONS IN MAN AT REST Author(s): GHAEM A, CHAUSSAIN M, CAMUS F, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 69 Issue: 2 Pages: A197-A198 Published: 1974 72. Title: BLOOD-SUPPLY TO HAND, SWEATING, CUTANEOUS AND RECTAL TEMPERATURES DURING MUSCULAR EXERCISE IN RESIDENTS AND VISITORS IN TROPICAL CLFMATE Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, RAYNAUD J, DUHAZE P, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 69 Issue: 2 Pages: A204-A204 Published: 1974 73. Title: INFLUENCE OF INTENSIVE REGENERATION ON CALCIUM LEVELS IN CRAB, PACHYGRAPAUS-MARMORATUS (FABRICIUS, 1787) 17 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, CHARMANT.M Source: COMPTES RENDUS HEBDOMAD AIRES DES SEANCES DE L ACADEMIE DES SCIENCES SERIE D Volume: 279 Issue: 15 Pages: 1281-1283 Published: 1974 74. Title: OXYGEN DEFICIT AND DEBT IN SUB MAXIMAL EXERCISE AT SEA-LEVEL AND HIGH-ALTITUDE Author(s): RAYNAUD J, MARTINEA.JP, BORDACHA.J, et al. Source: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 37 Issue: 1 Pages: 43-48 Published: 1974 Times Cited: 18 75. Title: EFFECT OF Y-ORGAN (MOLTING GLAND) REMOVAL ON CALCIUM LEVEL IN CRAB PACHYGRAPSUS-MARMORATUS (FABRICIUS, 1787) Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, VERNET G Source: COMPTES RENDUS DES SEANCES DE LA SOCIETE DE BIOLOGIE ET DE SES FILIALES Volume: 167 Issue: 12 Pages: 1873-1876 Published: 1973 Times Cited: 2 76. Title: HAND RESISTIVE AND CAPACITIVE VESSELS RESPONSE TO LEG EXERCISE Author(s): VERPILL A.JM, GHAEM A, LEVY B, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 68 Issue: 1 Pages: 51-64 Published: 1974 Times Cited: 2 77. Title: START OF PREMOLT CYCLE IN CRABS, PACHYGRAPSUS-MARMORATUS, SIMULTANEOUSLY DEPRIVED OF ITS Y ORGANS AND PEREIOPODA Author(s): CHARMANT.M, LAUTIER J, MARTINEA.JP, et al. Source: COMPTES RENDUS HEBDOMAD AIRE S DES SEANCES DE L ACADEMIE DES SCIENCES SERIE D Volume: 278 Issue: 8 Pages: 1075-1077 Published: 1974 Times Cited: 16 78. Title: BLOOD-FLOW OF HANDS AS FUNCTION OF ROOM-TEMPERATURE AND LOCAL TEMPERATURE Author(s): VERPILL A.JM, DURAND J, MARTINEA.JP, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 67 Issue: 3 Pages: A360-A360 Published: 1973 79. Title: BLOOD-FLOW OF HANDS AS FUNCTION OF ROOM-TEMPERATURE AND LOCAL TEMPERATURE - COMPARISON BETWEEN MALES AND FEMALES Author(s): VERPILL A.JM, DURAND J, MARTINEA.JP, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 67 Issue: 3 Pages: A360-A361 Published: 1973 80. Title: SURFACE AND RECTAL TEMPERATURES DURING PHYSICAL EXERCISE IN TROPICAL CLIMATE IN SUBJECTS TRANSPLANTED FROM HABITUAL SURROUNDINGS AND ACCLIMATIZED Author(s): DUHAZE P, TILLOUS MC, MARTINEA.JP Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 67 Issue: 2 Pages: A268-A268 Published: 1973 81. Title: CUTANEOUS BLOOD-FLOW DURING PHYSICAL EXERCISE IN TROPICAL CLIMATE IN SUBJECTS TAKEN OUT OF NATIVE ENVIRONMENT AND ACCLIMATIZED Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, DUHAZE P, VERPILL A.JM Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 67 Issue: 2 Pages: A292-A292 Published: 1973 Times Cited: 1 18 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 82. Title: AORTOCORONARY VEIN GRAFT - TECHNICAL MODIFICATIONS THAT MAY IMPROVE SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM RESULTS Author(s): GRONDIN CM, LEPAGE G, CASTONGU.YR, et al. Source: CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY Volume: 16 Issue: 4 Pages: 261-267 Published: 1973 Times Cited: 14 83. Title: CUTANEOUS BLOOD-FLOW DURING CARDIOVASCULAR REACTIONS AT TFME OF SHORT-TERM PHYSICAL EXERCISE OF DIFFERENT STRENGTH REQUIREMENTS Author(s): GHAEM A, LEVYB, MARITNEA.JP Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 67 Issue: 1 Pages: A193-A194 Published: 1973 Times Cited: 1 84. Title: RESPONSE OF CAPACITIVE VESSELS OF ANTEBRACHIUM TO CHANGES IN POSTURE Author(s): DUHAZE P, DURAND J, MARITNEA.JP Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 65 Issue: 3 Pages: A395-A395 Published: 1972 85. Title: ADAPTATION OF CUTANEOUS CIRCULATION TO TROPICAL CLFMATE Author(s): MARITNEA.JP, VERPILLA.M, LOCKHART A, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 65 Issue: 3 Pages: A447-A447 Published: 1972 Times Cited: 1 86. Title: COMPARISON OF CUTANEOUS BLOOD-FLOW OF SUBJECTS RESIDING AT ALTITUDES OF 4000 METERS AND OF DIFFERENT ETHNIC BACKGROUNDS Author(s): MARITNEA.JP, TILLOUS MC, LEMOEL JF, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 65 Issue: 2 Pages: A272-& Published: 1972 87. Title: REACTION OF CUTANEOUS CIRCULATION TO PHYSICAL EXERCISE AT HIGHEER ENVIRONMENTAL TEMPERATURE FOR UNACCUSTOMED SUBJECTS Author(s): GHAEM A, VERPILL A. JM, LEVYB, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 65 Issue: 1 Pages: A121-& Published: 1972 Times Cited: 1 88. Title: AORTOCORONARY VEIN GRAFTS - TECHNICAL MODIFICATIONS WHICH MAY IMPROVE SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM RESULTS Author(s): GRONDIN CM, GRONDIN P, LEPAGE G, et al. Source: CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL Volume: 107 Issue: 7 Pages: 636-& Published: 1972 89. Title: EVALUATION OF PHYSICAL APTITUDE OF HEART PATIENTS BY STUDY ON OXYGEN-CONSUMPTION DURING PHYSICAL EXERCISE Author(s): MARITNEA.JP, ROUDY G, TESSON E, et al. Source: ANNALES DE CARDIOLOGIE ET D ANGEIOLOGIE Volume: 21 Issue: 2 Pages: 199-& Published: 1972 90. Title: ESTIMATION OF PHYSICAL APTITUDE OF HEART PATIENTS BY STUDY ON OXYGEN-CONSUMPTION DURING PHYSICAL EXERCISE Author(s): MARITNEA.JP, ROUDY G, TESSON E, et al. Source: ARCHIVES DES MALADIES DU COEUR ET DES VAISSEAUX Volume: 65 Issue: 2 Pages: 286-& Published: 1972 91. Title: COMPARISON OF TWO METHODS FOR MEASUREMENT OF VOLUME MODIFICATIONS OF LIMB SEGMENT (PLETHYSMOGRAPHY WITH WATER AND 19 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 CONSTRAINT GAUGE Author(s): DUHAZE P, DURAND J, BID ART Y, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 63 Issue: 6 Pages: A203-& Published: 1971 Times Cited: 2 92. Title: INFLUENCE OF INTENSITY OF PHYSICAL EXERCISE ON VENOUS VOLUME OF HANDS Author(s): GHAEM A, VERPILLA.JM, ROUDY G, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 63 Issue: 6 Pages: A220-& Published: 1971 Times Cited: 1 93. Title: MAXIMUM OXYGEN CONSUMPTION OF ATHLETES NATIVE TO AND ALIENS OF HIGH ALTITUDES Author(s): COUDERT J, PAZZAMOR.M, TILLIUS MC, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 63 Issue: 2 Pages: A30-& Published: 1971 94. Title: CUTANEOUS BLOOD FLOW DURING MUSCULAR EXERCISE AT ALTITUDE IN RESIDENT AND TRANSPLANTED SUBJECTS Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, SEROUSSI S, COUDERT J, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 62 Pages: 296-& Published: 1970 95. Title: PARADOXICAL SKIN DILATATION IN RESPONSE TO COLD - COMPARATIVE STUDY OF BLOOD FLOW IN FOOT IN NORMAL SUBJECTS AND PATIENTS WITH PARAPLEGIA DUE TO LONG-STANDING TRAUMATIC SECTION OF SPINAL CORD Author(s): BID ART Y, DURAND J, MARTINEA.JP Source: PATHOLOGIE BIOLOGIE Volume: 18 Issue: 15-1 Pages: 743-& Published: 1970 Times Cited: 1 96. Title: EFFECTS OF SUDDEN CHANGES OF COMPOSITION OF GAS INSPIRED ON KINETICS OF OXYGEN CONSUMPTION DURING MUSCULAR EXERCISE Author(s): LATTRE JD, DERENNE JP, MAZZAM, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 62 Pages: 178-& Published: 1970 97. Title: BEHAVIOR OF CAPACITIVE VESSELS OF HAND DURINGBRIEF AND MODERATE WORK OF LOER LFMBS Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, VERPILLA.JM, PAVILLON N, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 62 Pages: 187-& Published: 1970 Times Cited: 1 98. Title: ACTION OF A VASODILATOR DRUG IN PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE -A DOUBLE BLIND TEST Author(s): BOUVRAIN Y, ROUDY G, MARTINEA.JP Source: PRESSE MEDICALE Volume: 78 Issue: 21 Pages: 977-& Published: 1970 99. Title: CUTANEOUS CIRCULATION DURING ADAPTATION TO HIGH ALTITUDE Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, DURAND J, COUDERT J, et al. Source: PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY Volume: 310 Issue: 3 Pages: 264-& Published: 1969 Times Cited: 8 100. Title: OXYGEN CONSUMPTION UNDER REST AND EXERCISE CONDITIONS DURING AC CLFMATION TO ALTITUDE Author(s): RAYNAUD J, MARTINEA.JP, COUDERT J, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: S 61 Pages: 167-& Supplement: Suppl. 1 Published: 1969 Times Cited: 3 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 101. Title: INFLUENCE OF ALTITUDE ON CUTANEOUS CIRCULATION OF RESIDENTS AND NEWCOMERS Author(s): DURAND J, VERPILL A. JM, PRADEL M, et al. Source: FEDERATION PROCEEDINGS Volume: 28 Issue: 3 Pages: 1124-& Published: 1969 Times Cited: 15 102. Title: CONTRIBUTION OF CUTANEOUS HAND CIRCULATION TO VASCULAR ADAPTATION ON LOWER LIMBS DURING EXERCISE Author(s): SEROUSSI S, VERPILLAJM, ROUDY G, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: S 61 Pages: 403-& Supplement: Suppl. 2 Published: 1969 Times Cited: 4 103. Title: INFLUENCE OF MODERATE HYPEROXEMIA ON OXYGEN CONSUMPTION DURING MUSCULAR EXERCISE IN NATIVES AT HIGH ALTITUDES Author(s): MARTINE A. JP, VERPILLAJM, SEROUSSI S, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: S 60 Pages: 276-& Supplement: Suppl. 1 Published: 1968 104. Title: CIRCULATING BLOOD VOLUME IN MAN .2. DISTRIBUTION ROLE AND REGULATION OF CIRCULATING BLOOD Author(s): PANNIER C, SEROUSSI S, MARTINEA.JP, et al. Source: REVUE FRANCAISE D ETUDES CLINIQUES ET BIOLOGIQUES Volume: 13 Issue: 2 Pages: 124-& Published: 1968 Times Cited: 5 105. Title: CIRCULATING BLOOD VOLUME IN MAN I. MEASUREMENT OF VOLUME OF CIRCULATING BLOOD Author(s): SEROUSSI S, PANNIER C, MARTINEA.JP, et al. Source: REVUE FRANCAISE D ETUDES CLINIQUES ET BIOLOGIQUES Volume: 13 Issue: 1 Pages: 17-& Published: 1968 Times Cited: 1 106. Title: MUSCULAR EXERCISE AT HIGH ALTITUDES Author(s): MARTINEA.JP, MENIER R, COUDERT J, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: S 60 Pages: 373-& Supplement: Suppl. 2 Published: 1968 107. Title: POST-ISCHEMIC CUTANEOUS VASCULAR FLOW AND DISTENSIBILITY IN HUMANS Author(s): SEROUSSI S, DURAND J, VERPILLAJM, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: S 60 Pages: 545-& Supplement: Suppl. 2 Published: 1968 108. Title: INFLUENCE OF VASCULAR CUTANEOUS RESISTANCES AND CAPACITANCES IN HUMANS Author(s): DURAND J, MARTINEA.JP, PRADEL M, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 59 Issue: 4A Pages: 400-& Published: 1967 Times Cited: 5 109. Title: CUTANEOUS VASCULAR RESISTANCE AND CAPACITANCE IN HUMANS WITH NORMAL OR INTERRUPTED NERVE PATHS Author(s): SEROUSSI S, MARTINEA.JP, VERPILLAJM, et al. 21 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 59 Issue: 4A Pages: 502-& Published: 1967 Times Cited: 4 110. Title: PRESSION VEINEUSE PERIPHERIQUE ET TEMPERATURE LOCALE Author(s): DURAND J, SEROUSSI S, MASSOUM M, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 58 Issue: 2 Pages: 220-& Published: 1966 111. Title: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF DISTENSIBLE VASCULAR BED OF HAND Author(s): MARTINE A. JP, SERROUSS.S, PANNIER C, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 58 Issue: 6 Pages: 687-& Published: 1966 Times Cited: 14 112. Title: HEMOMECANIQUE VEINEUSE EN FUNCTION DU DEBIT ARTERIEL LOCAL Author(s): DURAND J, MARTINEA. JP, SEROUSSI S, et al. Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 57 Issue: 5 Pages: 605-& Published: 1965 113. Title: MODIFICATIONS DES PROPRIETES MECANTIQUES DES VAISSEAUX CAPACITIES DE LAMAIN SOUS LINFLUENCE DE LA TEMPERATURE LOCALE Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, DECAUD J, DURAND J Source: JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE Volume: 55 Issue: 2 Pages: 163-& Published: 1963 Times Cited: 3 Books 1. Title: UNE HISTOIRE DE L'HOPITAL LARIBOISIERE OU LE VERS AILES DE LA MISERE (HISTOIRE DE PARIS) Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP Source: L'Harmattan, Paris 1998, Pages: 365, ISBN 978 2738469908 2. Title: LESORDRESRELIGIEUXDANSLESHOPITAUXDESPARIS,LES CONGREGATIONS HOSPITALIERES DANS LES HASPITAUX Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP Source: L'Harmattan, Paris 2002, Pages: 430, ISBN 978- 2747528078 3. Title: DE VINCENTE DE PAUL A ROBERT DEBRE. DES ENFANTS AB ANDONNÉ ET DES ENFANTS MALADES A PARIS. Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP Source: L'Harmattan, Paris 2007, Pages: 373, ISBN 4. Title: LA COMMUNE DE PARIS, L'ASSISTANCE PUBLIQUE ET LES HOPITAUXEN 1871 Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP Source: L'Harmattan, Paris 2004, Pages: 288, ISBN 978- 2747576892 5. Title: PHYSIOLOGIE D LA CIRCULATION CUTANEE Author(s): MARTINEAUD JP, SEROUSSI S Source: MASSON, Paris 1977, Pages: 183, ISBN 2225473552 Other references 1. FIŠER, B., SIEGELOVÁ, J., AL-KUBATI, M., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, JP Perfusion pressure - carotic artery flow relationship in normotensives and patients with essetial hypertension. Scripta Medica, Brno : Lékařská fakulta MU, 67, Suppl. Is. 9-12. ISSN 1211-3595. 1994. 2. SAVIN, E., SIEGELOVÁ, J., FIŠER, B., MARTINEAUD, JP Determinationnon invasive de la compliance aortique chez l'homme. Arch.Physiol.Biochem., 104, 3s. 257-264. ISSN 1381-3455. 1996. 22 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 3. SAVIN, E., SIEGELOVÁ, J., FIŠER, B., BONNIN, R, MARTrNEAUD, J. 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In 2nd International Symposium on Angiotensin II Antagonism. Book of Abstracts. Londýn : The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, 1999. od s. P.98, 1 s. 23. FIŠER, B., SIEGELOVÁ, J., DUŠEK, J., PLACHETA, Z., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J.P. Baroreflex sensitivity in essential hypertension treated with trandolapril and dilthiazem in combination. In 2nd International Symposium on Angiotensin II Antagonism. Londýn : The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, 1999. od s. P.77, 1 s. 24. FIŠER, B., SIEGELOVÁ, J., DUŠEK, J., DOBŠÁK, P., PLACHETA, Z., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J.P. Blood pressure component of baroreflex in patients with essential hypertension. In Chronobiology and non-invasive methods in cardiology. Eds. Halberg E, Kenner T., Fišer B., Siegelová J. Brno : IDVPZ, MU, 1999. s. 48-51. ISBN 80-7013-279-5. 25. FIŠER, B., SIEGELOVÁ, J., DUŠEK, J., PLACHETA, Z, VANK, P., SAVIN, E, MARTINEAUD, J.P. Vztah mezi krevním tlakem a průtokem v arteria brachialis u normotoniků a hypertoniků. 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ISSN 0031-6768. 2002. 26 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 52. SIEGELOVÁ, J., HOFÍREK, I., DUŠEK, J., FIŠER, B., PLACHETA, Z., JANČÍK, J., DOBŠÁK, P., TOMAN, J., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J. P. PULSE PRESSURE AND RESISTANCE OF CAROTID ARTERIAL BLOOD VESSELS IN ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION. Abstracts. Acta Physiol. Hungarica, Budapešť : Akadémiai Kiadó, 89, l-3s. 163-163. ISSN 0231-424X. 2002. 53. SIEGELOVÁ, J., JANČÍK, J., SVAČINOVÁ, H., DOBŠÁK, P., PLACHETA, Z., FIŠER, B., DUŠEK, J., MELUZÍN, J., TOMAN, J., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J. P. Exercise training in patients with chronic coronary artery disease: baroreflex sensitivity and heart rate variability. Abstract. J. Hypertens, Anglie : Lippicott Williems and Wilkins, 20, Suppl. 4, od s. S296, 1 s. ISSN 0263-6352. 2002. 54. JANČÍK, J., SIEGELOVÁ, J., DOBŠÁK, P., PLACHETA, Z., FIŠER, B., DUŠEK, J., VÁRNAYOVÁ, L., VOHLÍDALOVÁ, L, PANOVSKÝ, R., MELUZÍN, J., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J.P Baroreflex sensitivity and heart rate variability in patients with chronic ischemic heart disease and systolic dysfunction:effect of exercise training. Clinical Autonomic Research, Graz : Springer Gmbh, 13, Is. 57-57. ISSN 0959-9851. 2003. 55. MARTINEAUD, J.P, BONNIN, P., SAVIN, E., VANK, P., JANČÍK, J., DUŠEK, J., FIŠER, B., SIEGELOVÁ, J. BLOOD FLOW CONTROL OF EXTRA AND INTRACRANIAL ARTERIAL VESSELS DURING MODERATE HYPOTENSION. In CHRONOBIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS IN PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM. BRNO :NCO NZO, MU Brno, 2003. s. 109-113, 5 s. svl. ISBN 80-7013-394-5. 56. SIEGELOVÁ, J., HOFÍREK, L, FIŠER, B., DUŠEK, J., PLACHETA, Z., JANČÍK, J., DOBŠÁK, P., SVAČINOVÁ, H., VANK, P., TOMAN, J., SAVIN, E., MARTINEAUD, J.P. PULSE PRESSURE AND CAROTID BLOOD FLOW IN ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION. Scripta medica, Brno : Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, 76, 5, od s. 301-304, 4 s. ISSN 1211-3395. 2003. 57. GUEYE L., SECK D., SAMB A., CISSE E, CAMARAK., MARTINEAUD J.P. Physiological adaptations to exercise during a short-term fasting. Scripta medica Brno 2003, roč. 76, č. 5, s. 291-296. 58. MARTINEAUD J.P, SAMB A., GUEYE L., SECK D., BADJI L., CISSE E. Exercise performance in young subjects with sickle cell disease. Physiologicaladaptations to exercise during a short-term fasting. Scripta medica Brno 2003, roč. 75, č. 2, s. 111-117. 59. SIEGELOVÁ, J., SVAČINOVÁ, H., FIŠER, B., DUŠEK, J., JANČÍK, J., SVOBODA, L., DOBŠÁK, P., MARTINEAUD, J.P, SAVIN, E. ALTERATIONS DU SYSTÉME NERVEUX AUTONOME CHEZ LES SUJET S DIABETIQUE S H YPERTENDU S ETNONHYPERTENDUS. In 71e Congrés de la Société de Physiologic Paris : Société de Physiologie, 2004. od s. 108-108, 1 s. 60. MARTINEAUD J.P, SAMB A., GUEYE L., SECK D., BADJI L., CISSE F. Control of temperature in men in Senegal. NCO NZO, MU Brno. 2004, pp. 91-94, ISBN 80 7013-412-7. Prof. MUDr. Jarmila Siegelová, DrSc. Head, Dept. of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Kamenice 5, 625 00 Brno 27 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 A REVIEW OF CONTINUOUS RECORDING OF BLOOD DENSITY AND OF ORCADIAN VARIATION OF BLOOD DENSITY. Thomas Kenner Dedicated to the memory of Bohumil Fiser Department of Physiology, Medical University Graz, Austria The Mechanical Oscillator Technique was invented by H. Leopold and Stabinger and is manufactured by Firma Paar in Graz, Austria. The technique is based on the determination of the the resonant frequency of a mechanical bending type U-shaped oscillator, filled with or perfused with the sample fluid. The U-shaped glass tube oscillator is fixed at its open ends and excited by electronic means to vibrate perpendicularly to the plane of the U- tube. The oscillator, which we used for most biological measurements is a specially constructed micro-oscillator with a sample volume of 0.1 ml and a heat exchange coil. The frequency of the oscillations depends on the mass of he oscillator including the fluid in this coil. In the year 1977 T. Kenner, H. Hinghofer-Szalkay and H. Leopold (1) published first animal experiments on continuous recording of blood density using the new technique of the mechanical oscillator principle in animal experiments. In the same year we could, together with H. Pogglitsch (2) demonstrate the clinical usefulness of continuous recording of blood density during hemodialysis. A review paper reporting and summarizing our early results was published by T. Kenner (3) in 1982. During the reported first measurement in hemodialysis, the blood was directly led through the oscillator. Due to problems concerning the sterility of the oscillator, systematic clinical measurements in patients were problematic. Since new non-invasively applicable sensors - based on the measurement of sound-wave-velocity in the blood (4) are available recordings in patients are easily possible. Fluid density is defined as mass per unit volume. Blood density is closely related to hematocrit. The new technique can be applied for the observation of certain effects of volume-shift between blood and tissue and the effect of different injected solutions. GENERAL REMARKS It seems quite interesting to note that the availability of certain methods plays a role for the assessment of the importance of a diagnostic measurement and of the therapeutic relevance of a certain variable. From a more pragmatic viewpoint, the diagnostic value of any method is related to its ability to add information into a model of the system (the patient or one of his organ systems) to be examined. It seems that the scientific interest in a variable like blood density depends on the availability of a suitable and simple technique for its measurement. For quite a long period of time, the measurement of density was either so complicated or so inaccurate that, with the exception of urine density determination and some measurements of plasma density for the estimation of plasma protein concentration, interest shown in the field of medicine was nearly negligible. Interestingly enough the first detailed study about the density of blood (the specific weight) was performed by Lloyd Jones in 1887 using a falling drop method. Lloyd Jones found a characteristic age-dependent variation of blood density and a circadian rhythm; see (3). It is remarkable that Chronobiology was taken into account at this early time. Another early observation on blood density was published by a practitioner in Davos, Switzerland (1902). He observed by his measurements the rise of blood density during stay at high altitudes and the lower blood density in anaemic patients. The methods used were slow and complicated. 28 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Subsequent improvements were still unable to permit such methods to be applied for continuous recording of fluid density. The newly invented oscillator technique brought a very special new way to record fluid density in general and blood density in particular. Here three examples will be presented. In his Dissertation, which was supervised by H. Hinghofer-Szalkay (6), Franz Vauti (5) observed and analysed two phenomena in 6 joung persons. Results from one person can be seen in Fig. 1. After 90 min of horizontal position, the shift towards upright position led to a marked increase as well of the blood density (BD) as of the plasma density (PD) and hematocrit (Hkt). In Fig. 1 a period of 2 times 24 hours is plotted. The dotted lines represents upright position; the continuous lines represent horizontal position. The reason of the shift is the movement of Fluid from blood into tissue of the lower body. US* 9^ IM 9-1 iei7 5-1 .■■■■■-rai-B-a-- r ■ ■ fa - + ■ • •-**-«•*-*■*-•* t- - - ■ f >•<■<■ ■ I -I ■ I *—-—^.K, I a ■—-—■ ■ ■■—fa E. fa—fa. b ■—■ I ■ I—*._J_^_ _h—J—|i—^- h ■ I ■Id : -if. ■ - - - • Fig. 1 see text. Abszissa: hours starting from 0 to 24 h and then repeat 24 hrs. Density in g/1. The rise of blood density in morning hours is remarkable. 29 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Fig. 2 demonstrates one of our early recordings, which was done during the time course of a hemodilution treatment. The abscissa is given in hours of treatment and measurement of blood density during the hemodilution. The thick line represents the blood density. The dashed line shows the amount of removed fluid. And the dash-dotted line shows the course of the systolic pressure. This first experience (2) in 1977 led since then to an increased application of this technique. The marked increase of the blood density during loss of fluid by hemodilution can be seen. Figh. 2. Record of density (rho) Fluid loss DeltaV and systolic blood pressure (ps) during 8 hours hemodilution The following fig. 3 from (4) - so far - is unique. The four lines show oscillations (here: the ordinate shows the variation, not the absolute values) of the arterial blood of a voluntary person during different frequency of breathing. The oscillations of the blood density are clearly synchronized with the respiration periods. 30 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 son rhythmic breathing 0 50 100 130 time (seconds] Fig. 3. Variation of arterial blood density is synchronized with breathing periods. Four examples ars shown in the Figure (The ordinate does not show the absolute Values). THE NUMBERS IN SECONDS ARE THE PERIODS OF BREATHING. This result is interesting, because during breathing apparently the diameter of the small vessels in the lung is varying. One possible explanation of this phenomenon indicates, that the so called Fahraeus-Lindqvist effect in the capillaries is responsible for the variation of the blood density during breathing. This effect indicates that in capillaries the hematocrit is the smaller the smaller the diameter of the capillaries. During breathing the capillaries in the alveoles can be assumed to change their diameter periodically. Another explanation attributes the fluid shift between capillaries and interstitial tissue a role in the generation of the variation. The latter influence of a different mechanism appears specially interesting because of its possible influence in pathological situations, like interstitial edema. CONCLUSION It should be pointed here, that the problems discussed in this short note are but a small and incomplete part of the possible applications of the method and of the particular viewpoint. Besides the possibility of a more detailed quantitative analysis of transcapillary fluid shifts, we have already in our first observations in human beings demonstrated several possibilities of clinical applications. Since the time of our early experiments the application of the recording of the density of blood and other fluids has markedly grown. 31 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 LITERATURE 1. Kenner T, Hinghofer-Szalkay H, Leopold H: The continuous high precision measurement of the density of flowing blood. Pflügers Arch. 370; 25 .- 29 (1977) 2. Kenner T, Hinghofer-Szalkay H, Leopold H, Pogglitsch H: The relation between the density of blood and the arterial pressure in animal experiments and in patients during hemodialysis. Z. Kardiologie 66; 399 - 401 (1977) 3. Kenner T: Physiological measurement in circulation research. A review on the biological application of a new method. 9; 67 - 74 (1982) 4. Schneditz D, Moser M, Smolle-Jüttner FM, Dorp E, Pogglitsch H, Kenner T: Methods in clinical hemorheology: the continuous measurement of arterial blood density and blood sound speed in man. Biorheology 27, 895 - 902 (1990) 5. Vauti F: Der Einfluss der circadianen Rhythmik auf hämatologische und cardiovasculäre Parameter beim Menschen in der Orthostase unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der transkapillären Flüssigkeitsverschiebung. Ph.D. - Dissertation, Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz, (1984) 6. Hinghofer-Szalkay H: Untersuchungen zum Einfluss von Körperlage und Schwerkraft auf die Eigenschaften von Blut und Blutplasma. Klin. Wochenschr. 58, 1147-1154 (1980) Prof. Thomas Kenner, M.D., Dr. h. c. multi Department of Physiology Medical University Graz A-8010 Graz, Austria 32 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY CONCERNS AVOIDANCE OF PERSONAL AND SOCIETAL HEALTH-RELATED AND NATURAL CATACLYSMS Franz Halberg1, Germaine Cornelissen1, Othild Schwartzkopff1, Elchin Khalilov2, Tamila Khalilov2, Fuad Damirov2, Zhengrong Wang3, Yoshihiko Watanabe4, Kuniaki Otsuka4, Jarmila Siegelova5, Abdullah A. Al-Abdulgader6 1 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA; 2 InterGeo-Tethys, International Scientific and Technical Complex, Baku, Azerbaijan; 3 West China Medical Center, Sichuan University, Chengdu, PR China; 4 Tokyo Women's Medical University, Medical Center East, Tokyo, Japan; 5 Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic; 6 Prince Sultan Cardiac Center, Al Ahsa, Saudi Arabia Preamble Before Sputnik in 1957 and Vostok in 1961, it seemed justified to call human extraterrestrial exploration futuristic at best. Yet Konštantín Tsiolkovsky wrote his "The exploration of cosmic space by reaction devices" in 1903. Robert H. Goddard published "Amethod for reaching extreme altitudes" in 1919. When the senior author lectured in Washington at a meeting of NASA in the early post-Sputnik era and the USA also had a tennis ball-sized satellite in space, his talk was interrupted by the announcement that the Russians had just placed a truck-sized vehicle into space. Nonetheless, historians can be myopic: an editor in 1997, because of their association with cosmism, called both the father of by-then Sputnik and Vostok-documented spaceflight, Tsiolkovsky, and the father of heliobiology, Alexander Leonidowich Chichevsky, occult (1, 2). By the same token, both Theodore Janeway (3), who did not wish to see a patient before he had data sufficient to examine periodic variations in 1904 and Frederic C. Bartter (4) who wanted a cosinor analysis of each patient's time series by 1974 are mostly forgotten, even if they were distinguished opinion leaders in their time. Many preventive cardiologists may regard as futuristic at best the proposition made at a prior symposium in Brno, a very few years ago, that human blood pressure should be monitored around the clock for 7 days as a start, with continued monitoring when abnormality is found, and that blood pressure be monitored from womb to tomb once affordable unobtrusive instrumentation becomes available, integrated into a system for automatic data analysis, in order to prevent cerebro-, cardio-, reno-vascular diseases, strokes in particular. It is against this background that a draft of a resolution to be integrated into a proposal to the UN and WHO goes yet further. Resolution at the World Forum "Natural Cataclysms & Global Problems of the Modern Civilization; Geocataclysm - 2011" Given that physicists have started the monitoring of various physical signals in different geographic locations on earth and eventually in extraterrestrial space and have made their recordings available for every one to access; Given that this initiative has been invaluable to learn more about how the environment affects life on earth and to provide warnings so that timely countermeasures can be instituted (examples include the 33 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 recording of air and water quality for health reasons, the use of corrosion sensors for surveilling the structural integrity of bridges and other constructions, the monitoring of space weather concerned as yet only with blackouts and interruptions in radio communication, and the monitoring of gravitational waves for earthquake prediction); Given that biomedical variables analyzed and interpreted in a chronobiological perspective, combined with the continuous monitoring and recording of solar and interplanetary as well as geomagnetic activity, have already served as valuable indicators of biospheric activities, of great impact and direct action in social upheavals as well as in terror attacks and other important events in human history, quite apart from being of direct personal self-help in computer-aided healthcare benefit; Given that the required monitoring is accessible, cheap and acts as a global as well as a local eye, i.e., as a glocal window in both space and time; and Given that physiological, pathological and epidemiological data to be accumulated could be organized and analyzed retrospectively as well as prospectively in repeated systematic passes over the accumulating information on a dedicated website, with aims similar to those of NASA, NOAA and RAND, making the data available to everyone and including educational materials to ease the transdisciplinary communication among the entire scientific community; It is proposed to complement and integrate transdisciplinarily endeavors limited thus far to physics by including the systematic monitoring of biomedical and socio-ecological variables that can also serve as valuable markers of environmental integrity and provide warnings of environmental threats, and by making the information available on a dedicated website; Thereby to achieve the double purpose of monitoring the environment by a most sensitive set of biospheric magnetometers while also receiving as a hardly negligible dividend a transformation of a costly spotcheck-based medicine into an improved self-help-based cost-effective cyber- healthcare with emphasis on prevention that no longer flies blind to the variabilities in us and around us and of their critical interactions, far beyond interfering with communications only among us, by resolving altered communications in us, as harbingers of both natural and human-made as well as personal cataclysms. Commentary After the Italian city of Ľ Aquila was devastated by an earthquake on 6 April 2009, and more than 300 people lost their lives, it is being asked whether those concerned about panic, who failed to warn the public, were at fault (5). Concern about unwarranted false alarms possibly also underlies the lack of response of Japanese authorities to their own scientists and to the forecast placed on 9 March 2011 by the Global Network for Forecasting of Earthquakes (GNFE) on the www, sei smonet. org website. That information was also communicated two days before the 11 March 2011 Sendai earthquake directly to all members of GNFE. Concern about future catastrophes prompted the same undersigned forecasters from Baku to organize and hold a World Forum on "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization" from 19-21 September 2011 in Istanbul, Turkey (www.2011 .geocataclysm.org) (6), advocating the extension of already ongoing sequential analyses of data not only from physical, but also biospheric monitoring, so that the many anecdotal antecedents of earthquakes reported for animals in nature (7) can be complemented by objective numerical data collection ongoing for other reasons in physiology or other experimental laboratories (8) and in data from the self-monitoring public (9, 10). Half-hourly around-the-clock blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) monitoring is now feasible for severe disease prevention, Figure 1, advocated again in Istanbul as a feature of self-help in health care (10). The same data can be used along with those from purely physical monitoring for forecasting 34 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 earthquakes. This is not wishful thinking, as documented in Figure 2. On the top left of this figure are data from monitoring mice in a laboratory during a span bracketing the 12 May 2008 Sechuan earthquake. Antecedents are obvious, as noted elsewhere (8). On the top right, an increase in BP for 2 days is seen during the 7 days centered on the Sendai earthquake in 13 patients who happened to be monitored at half-hourly intervals around the clock, each for at least 7 days, one of them for decades, as advocated by a series of earlier international consensus meetings (10). The objective changes before an earthquake reported in Istanbul, including those on top of Figure 2, were statistically significantly different from any changes in several control populations, as also shown in Figure 2. Thus, beyond earthquake prediction by purely physical means, these findings are in keeping with the possibility that one may learn from a biospheric complement to seismologic monitoring, as an added measure that may be a largely cost-free dividend of ongoing endeavors by a self-surveilling public and in pharmaceutical companies. Some affordable, unobtrusive instrumentation is already available for the half-hourly automatic monitoring advocated for human populations, as used during the Sendai earthquake (9). It serves for the detection of vascular variability disorders that are otherwise undiagnosed and can be treated and reduced in frequency of occurrence, if not eliminated. Figure 1 shows risks that exceed that of a high BP (10), and continuous surveillance may possibly also have dividends in endeavors for understanding earthquakes, Figure 2, if not for their prediction. The bottom right of Figure 2 shows, with personal disasters such as strokes, human-made cataclysms such as crime, terror and aggression that, among others, share 50-year cycles with earthquakes, as seen on the bottom left of Figure 2. It is re-emphasized that similar periods in themselves are not sufficient evidence for any association. They gain meaning when subtraction and/or addition of a component in space weather leads to corresponding damping or amplification of a human marker variable, as shown in Figures 3 and 4, concerning a transyear band also found as an about 1.44-year component in earthquakes, Figure 2, bottom left. Figure 5 shows that the about-50-year cycle also characterizes tsunamis, hardly surprising in view of their association with earthquakes, yet as the bottom section on the right of Figure 2 shows, the quindecennian is also found in physio-pathological variables. As noted above, the evidence in the figures will be part of a recommendation by the World Forum (of Istanbul) to the World Health Organization and the United Nations for the extension of an existing global network for the preparedness for dealing with natural disasters, while also including measures for understanding and avoiding personal health cataclysms, such as a massive stroke or human-made disasters such as terrorism, that further may lead to data contributing a better understanding and better risk assessment in the case of natural disasters. As to the analysis of the last 331 earthquakes summarized at the bottom of Figure 2, one finds, among other solar activity, a spectral component of about 50 years (11) known by economists as the Kondratiev cycle (12), which also characterizes other earthly natural and human affairs (13, 14), in keeping with earlier claims of an association of weather in space with earthquakes (15), deserving further scrutiny of the role of space weather and/or geomagnetism in physiology, Figure 6 (16-20) and in various cataclysms, perhaps by an effect via mood and vigor and other mental function, in keeping with Figure 7. This is also an appeal to physiological and pharmaceutical laboratories and to the self-surveilling public for time series bracketing earthquakes, notably in earthquake-susceptible locations. The cycles of the cosmos contribute to natural and human personal and societal disasters, including aggression. Learning about them yields the indispensable control information for anything done in time in science. They are ignored by "baselines" that are a word excusing the disregard of a transdisciplinary spectrum that contributes to sudden cardiac death, to whether we die from our own hand or by the hand of others (20). There is but one unified science, as noted earlier by others (21, 22), also with specific reference to earthquakes (23). 35 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 REFERENCES 1. Rosenthal BG. (Ed.) The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press; 1997. 480 pp. 2. Hagemeister M. Russian cosmism in the 1920s and today. In: Rosenthal BG. (Ed.) The Occult in Russian and Soviet Culture. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press; 1997. p. 185-202. 3. Janeway TC. The clinical study of blood pressure. New York: D. Appleton & Co.; 1904. 300 pp. 4. BartterFC. Periodicity and medicine. In: SchevingLE, HalbergF, Pauly JE. (Eds.) Chronobiology. 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Journal-Lancet (Minneapolis) 1951; 71: 312-319. 17. Halberg F. Some physiological and clinical aspects of 24-hour periodicity. Journal-Lancet (Minneapolis) 1953; 73: 20-32. 18. Kaine HD, Saltzer HS, Conn JW. Mechanism of diurnal eosinophil rhythms in man. J Lab Clin Med 1955; 45: 247-252. 36 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 19. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Tvildiani L, Gigolashvili M, Janashia K, Toba T, Revilla M, Regal P, Sothern RB, Wendt HW, Wang ZR, Zeman M, Jozsa R, Singh RB, Mitsutake G, Chibisov SM, Lee J, Holley D, Holte JE, Sonkowsky RP, Schwartzkopff O, Delmore P, Otsuka K, Bakken EE, Czaplicki J, International BIOCOS Group. Chronobiology's progress: season's appreciations 2004-2005. Time-, frequency-, phase-, variable-, individual-, age- and site-specific chronomics. J Appl Biomed 2006; 4: 1-38. http: //www, zsf. j cu. cz/vyzkum/j ab/4_ 1 /halb erg .pdf 20. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Sothern RB, Katinas GS, Schwartzkopff O, Otsuka K. Cycles tipping the scale between death and survival (= "life"). Progress of Theoretical Physics 2008; Suppl. 173: 153-181. 21. Roederer JG. Tearing down disciplinary barriers. Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union 1985; 66: 681, 684-685. 22. Gregori GP. Galaxy - Sun - Earth relations: The origin of the magnetic field and of the endogenous energy of the Earth, with implications for volcanism, geodynamics and climate control, and related items of concern for stars, planets, satellites, and other planetary objects. A discussion in a prologue and two parts. Beiträge zur Geschichte der Geophysik und Kosmischen Physik, Band 3, Heft 3, 2002, 471 pp. ISNN: 1615 - 2824 - NE: Gregori, Giovanni P. © Science Edition, Arbeitskreis Geschichte Geophysik / W. Schröder, Germany 2002. 23. Freund F. Seeking out Earth's warning signals. Nature 2011 (26 May); 473: 452. (also in preparation: Seismologists can't do it alone.) Support GM-13981 (FH) and University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (GC, FH) 37 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 I. MEflOfi-Hwwrtwitai [MH1 Diagnnsis: II, CHftT)CIHCldl*ttHww-*mtfMuat-T«flHc«11 / All oihef tested risk factors have lower relative risk Mole also smaller uncertainty [bar height) for CHAT vs MH —r- —r- , No risk S BP-CHAT D BP-CHAT * Risk of Cerebral Ischemic Event (N=297), Results are in keeping with independent outcome stuoy on 1179 untreated patients, using (tie left ventricular mass index as proxy. Figure 1. High blood pressure (BP) is a known risk factor for adverse cardiovascular outcomes. In a 6-year prospective study of 297 patients, systolic MESOR-hypertension (MESOR, a rhythm-adjusted mean, is acronym for Midline Estimating Statistic Of Rhythm) was associated with a relative risk of 4.12 (left). In other words, patients with an elevated SBP were 4.12 times more likely to suffer an adverse event than normotensive individuals. The uncertainty of this relative risk, gauged by its 95% confidence interval (height of bar) is barely above the no-risk line. By comparison, an abnormal circadian pattern of BP characterized by an excessive swing (CHAT, brief for Orcadian Hyper-Amplitude-Tension) is associated with an even larger relative risk of 6.21 (systolic CHAT) or 8.16 (diastolic CHAT), their 95% confidence intervals being well above the no-risk line. The diagnosis of CHAT and of other Vascular Variability Disorders (VVDs) requires the around-the-clock monitoring of BP and heart rate, preferably for a minimum of 7 days at the outset. It cannot be obtained from single measurements typically taken in the physician's office as is current practice today. © Halberg. 38 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Murine locomotor activity bracketing Human systolic blood pressure bracketing Chengdu earthquake (12 May 2008) Mag. 9 0 Sendai earthquake (11 Mar 2011) Mag. 8 0 Earthquake - % V - 1 ri X h 4 X ¥ L J-^ = 7ai-^pTr. ».B*«nn-»JOhX7=.BK^¥X£h = 7 - ■■----"-lit ItH 14 . i t .5 i H t - XEDX.ELr.XZX.ELX.EEL.LE 4{ Cll (^i {^f ( < VEKW |M) M EVrtH*d Blood fHuir ISO Pi IVwn U Bubterii Br*: kill ft) »11 Larthqii^amriOuT«umlwidi11 Control ■ Ma mod* rim Piwf Van (botlwni A — 'fllHIl ■■■^,J' W - c-r-nam ^ /V1 * I J. l 1 An about 50-year cycle characterizes the incidence of major earthquakes (N=331) T II «■ —> Hv m mo mo 'm iw "so in nm «1 iho xi mo -i-.x- ri :it 5.1 i lirtvnilW.l ■: tiujh-»i !!«>:■[■.: Figure 2. Proposed biospheric contribution to the understanding, if not prediction of earthquakes. Upper left: Locomotor activity of mice telemeterd around the clock was statistically significantly decreased starting 3 days prior to the magnitude 8.0 earthquake in Chengdu, China on 12 May 2008 (8). Upper right: Human systolic blood pressure started increasing 2 days prior to the magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Sendai, Japan on 11 March 2011, documented on the basis of weeklong records of around-the-clock ambulatory data from 13 Japanese (9). Similar records from longitudinal and transverse controls differ in their time course, suggesting that the trend observed before the earthquake was related to it rather than being a feature of an anticipated weekly pattern. Lower left: The monthly incidence of major earthquakes since 1900 is characterized by the presence of cycles with periods of about 49.3, 12.2, 1.44, and 0.41 year(s), given with their uncertainties in parentheses (11). Lower right: The most prominent about-50-year cycle is also documented in physiology, pathology, societal upheavals and space weather. Nonlinearly estimated periods are displayed with their 95% confidence intervals shown as the length of corresponding horizontal bars (11). ©Halberg. 39 6 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 SUBTRACTION {REMOVE APPROACH) IMPLEMENTED BY THE SOLAR WIND When (above) solar wind speed {SWS} loses some spectral components, e»g>k of ~!3 years (E), After a delay (El. counterparts in systolic blood pressure (SBP) (below) are nirrcwH) or dimperjed. yetpmlioni ■Then niri drvtn and not lost (since they are genetically anchored) lO- 'I'. I'm i 4= Ulf ^— -' Sill1 FH I Ufr n-jknbi ikari GJarg apecLra d1 Fh M 70 y flJ age al siarl ofneasLianenlsq 30mrules. wilhgaps. prerarficl by Gaorga S Kal nas Argi.mi cycles (after Aeolus r_lw crl winds .a ancanl Greek mythology) of SWS ara SBP change ir trecfjenEY (smoo'hry [A] or nn'..npy [G.C.D] birurealmg [D F] and -eioin [G\. shey also charge n arr.pf ute (A) (up to disappearing [C.E|ana nwppeanng) Figure 3. The about-1.4-year component detected in the incidence of earthquakes, known as a transyear, can prominently characterize solar wind speed, as shown in the top gliding spectral window by the wide dark band around 1.3 years (vertical scale are frequencies in the range of 1 cycle in 2 to 0.7 year(s)). This component, however, is Aeolian in nature, its characteristics (frequency and amplitude) changing as a function of time. This is exemplified around 1998 (E) when its amplitude is considerably decreased (the darker the band, the larger the amplitude is). After E, the transyear is no longer detected in solar wind speed. A transyear is also found to characterize systolic blood pressure of a man (FH) who monitored himself around the clock for over 23 years (with interruptions), as seen in the bottom gliding spectral window. With a lag (at E'), the transyear in FH's SBP is dampened but remains detectable, suggesting that the frequencies characterizing the solar wind may still drive us and may be built into us since they persist in the absence of a counterpart in the Sun. © Halberg. 40 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Statistical significance (*) of 1.33-year transyear in 39 yeara of terrorist acta from MIPT {bottom) in solar cycle 22 occurring (bottom right) following amplification [right] in solar wind speed {top) and in antipodal geomagnetic index (middle) Solar Cycle N ( 19BQ IMG 13» «35 1971 true ftilenctaf yearsi saw 1 2M7 j | a 2 21 L 22 23 _ L -f 4 is- NT - ^ ____ P ; ■ / ■y ag -HQ M H » ■I ^9 ■3-D MB » 2« ■9E-B ItfE '9fiB Timelyeaie) 3QM Figure 4. Atransyear common to solar wind speed (top), the antipodal geomagnetic activity index aa (middle), and the incidence of international terrorist acts (bottom), all three apparent as dark bands in the gliding spectral windows (left) are particularly prominent during solar cycle 22. The phase behavior at the average period (right) further indicates that the transyear in terrorism follows with a lag the transyears in solar wind speed and aa, persisting after 1998 when it is no longer detected with statistical significance in solar wind speed or aa (phases are displayed with their 95% confidence intervals only when the transyear is detected with statistical significance). ©Halberg. 41 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Modal [95% CI] (1 -Parameter for A) Period (y) Ampllucle^H) 51J6 [24.9 76.2] 0.0(2*1 [0.0066 0 M93| 12.7 [11.314.1] 0.0279 [0,0071 0.MB7| 2jQ7[2052.10] O.OW[002030.0615| 9-monlh running means 377 [0.340.33] 0.0451 [0.0245 O.Etf57| \ 1900 1910 1920 1930 1040 1950 1960 1970 I9fl0 1S0O 2000 2010 Time {calendar years) Figure 5. The pervading presence of Aeolian about-50-year (quindecennian) cycles in tsunamis as in earthquakes is noted by their presence in natality, in neonatal anthropometry as well as in the incidence of strokes and homicides and wars. ©Halberg. 42 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Subject ID (gender, age) RS (M. 28y> Reduction in HR CSD* Biological week in human heart rate (HR) P=0.017 7-day/1-day amplitude (A) ratio (CSD**) 1) Is dampened in the absence of a solar counterpart {blueh still driven after subtraction of solar wind) yet (not shown} 2) it persists (since it is genetically anchored] MH (F, fl1y) Mean ± SE P<0.05 I- ■25 Change in CSD ( HR-A Ratio (%)" CSD in Presen» oT Solar Circa sepia n "CSD; circBseptan (7'davHocircadiHn (1-day) A ratio "When 7-day component in sunspol area has no 7-day component (as analyzed by Y_S_ Varnova «I al<3eofnagrtelism and Agronomy 1983:23 425-4Z7). Figure 6. An about-7-day spectral component in the heart rate of five men is less prominent when the solar wind loses its counterpart of corresponding length. Implied, but not shown, is the persistence in the biosphere of an about-7-day component that can be amplified (driven) by a reciprocal component in solar activity. The approach by remove-and-replace in the study of circadian rhythms (16-18) is here extended to the circaseptan component, as it was extended to an addition and/or subtraction approach in Figures 3 and 4 in the transyear band (19, 20). © Halberg. 43 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Mood (red) is more Congruent (similar in terms of its frequency structure) To Magnetism of Space (SWS) and Earth (aa) than SWS and aa are bo each other {blue) Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP, green) may Serve as Proxy for Mental Functions SWS: Solar Wind Speed aa: antipodal geomagnetic disturbance index Poinl estimate of Mood-SWS association is ABOVE 9£%Cl of aa-SWS association REFERENCE PROXY Purely Physical far Menial Functions, Standard Including Mood P=005 -MOOD self-rated far 43.5 years (data of RS Sothen) aa vs. SWS SBP vs. SWS Mood vs SWS Mood vs. aa Figure 7. Congruence is a measure of similarity of time structures of two or more variables, gauged by the number of shared frequency components in a given spectral range. In the range of one cycle in 2.5 years to 3 cycles per year, statistical significance for the anticipated congruence between the antipodal geomagnetic index and solar wind speed is barely reached, the 95% confidence interval of the odds ratio just above the detection level (left). By comparison, mood assessed 5 to 6 times a day during waking for over 43 years by a clinically healthy man (RBS) has a much stronger congruence with solar wind speed or aa (last 2 columns to the right) than aa has with solar wind speed (left). Systolic blood pressure self-measured at the same times by RBS may serve as a proxy as it shows a congruence with solar wind speed (second column from left) of similar extent as does aa (left). © Halberg. Prof. Franz Halberg, M.D., Dr. h. c. multi Director Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Dept. of Laboratory Midi cine, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 44 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 MULTIPLE ORCADIAN PERIODS IN A LADY WITH RECURRING EPISODES OF ADYNAMIC DEPRESSION: CASE REPORT Franz Halberg1, Germaine Cornelissen1, Dewayne Hillman1, Elias Ilyia2, Ning Cegielski2, Maroun el-Khoury2, Judy Finley1, Faithe Thomas1, Vera Brandes3, Tomoshige Kino4, Anna Papadopoulou5, George P. Chrousos5, John F. Costella6, Miroslav Mikulecky7 1 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA 2 DiagnosTechs, Kent, WA, USA 3 Research Program Music Medicine, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria 4 National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA 5 First Department of Pediatrics, Athens University Medical School, Athens, Greece 6 Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia 7 Department of Biometry and Statistics, Neuroendocrinology Letters, Stockholm-Bratislava; Bratislava, Slovakia Her co-authors wish to express to Mrs. Judy Finley their esteem for the rigor, competence, stamina, motivation and ability to follow through with this demanding study. Support: GM-13981 (FH) and University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (GC, FH). Abstract JF, studied while 61 and 62 years of age, reports selenosensitivity with half-yearly recurrent downtimes for over 20 prior years in herself and recent concurrent milder episodes in her daughter FT and contemporaneous unusual behavior of her granddaughter LT, 3 years of age. We here record multiple circadian desynchronization during episodes of 2-3 months of downtimes recurring twice a year in her about-daily waking fraction, self-rated vigor-wellness, and wrist activity, in (first self-measured, thereafter automatically recorded) systolic (S) and diastolic (D) blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR), in urine volume and in salivary Cortisol, aldosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), testosterone, estradiol and melatonin, sampled around the clock at 4-hour intervals and determined in 11,702 hormone assays. In monthly summaries during the first 14 lunar months, JF, but not FT, showed the double tidal period, x, in non-linearly extended cosinor analyses of vigor-wellness (in the computer output, not input) in the first month of the first two investigated episodes and in several other variables in the first month of some subsequent episodes. So did LT in one of three longer than 7-day records of her around-the-clock measured DBP Overall, in her daily wake fraction, JF exhibited an -24.0-hour (h) x, an ~24.22-h, "desynchronized from society" (free-running [1-3]?) x, reported as intrinsic or endogenous on unacceptable sleep-wake schedules in prior forced desynchronization studies by others (4, 5), an ~24.8-h (double tidal) x and a ~24.4-h x. All xs with a CI (95% confidence interval) not covering 24.0 h may be the expression of a compromise (tug-of-war) arrived at by the interacting pulls with differing relative intensities of the moon and sun/society. As far as the waking fraction is concerned, the coexistence of JF's 4 xs cannot be regarded as pathogenic, since four similar xs were also found in the sleeping-waking of a clinically healthy man, living for ~3 years on a self-selected schedule (6). 45 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Our prior interpretation that in JF the 24.0-h x (the sun and society) on the one hand, and the 24.8-h x (i.e., earth tides, the lunidian) on the other hand, are in atug-of-war with the moon's pull strong during the first month of illness (7), stands, yet the apparent domination of the 24.0-h x during inter-episode spans of relative wellness is now qualified by the detection of a x differing from both the 24.0-h societal and the lunidian x found for salivary Cortisol, DHEA, estradiol and melatonin, which points to a block in the 24-h synchronizability of some of JF's important variables, while testosterone and aldosterone may have been 24-h synchronized during relative wellness by JF's treatment with 50 mg of spironolactone on arising and at bedtime. During downtimes, a pull by tides could act perhaps by gravity-induced changes in the magnetism of the earth's crust (8, 9). In any event, the familial incidence of selenosensitivity reported anecdotally is validated objectively by the unfakeable computer output (in analyses) of a double tidal x of-24.8 h documented as extremely rare in controls and not reported earlier as consistent in humans and certainly not repeatedly in several variables of the same person. Prior linear cosinor and other tests on his and others' important data by Miroslav Mikulecky, professor emeritus of medicine and statistics (10), had the lunidian x in the computer input to the single cosinor, a fully acceptable procedure that is here complemented by letting the x be a parameter to be estimated by the nonlinear cosinor. Background JF's self-rating scale of vigor/wellness describes her problems: 0: multiple symptoms / not able to get out of bed; 10: multiple symptoms / bed - chair - bathroom; 20: multiple symptoms / very minor accomplishment [prepare simple meal]; 30: multiple symptoms / sedentary accomplishment [limited computer work]; 40: multiple symptoms / increased accomplishment with limitation; 50: multiple symptoms / push for productivity followed by post-exertion strain; 60: short spurts of productivity requiring pacing; 70: productivity + minor dysautonomia or headache; 80: productivity or rest with no symptoms at all; 90: high productivity; 100: high productivity + euphoria. If improvement has taken place, but symptoms do not yet rank the next number, 5 is added). Early results objectively confirmed her selenosensitivity since they revealed the 24.8-h double tidal x in two consecutive episodes and were compatible with a beat in two desynchronized circadian rhythmic variables (7). Results Figure lA(top row) shows a chronobiologic serial section of original self-ratings of vigor/wellness of JF, 61 -year-old at the start of investigation. A twice yearly downtime is obvious, starting in the shaded lunar cycles, and is in keeping with the earlier record in the updated Table 1. Figure 1A (row 2) shows, as the lower curve, the time course of the average (MESOR, M, i.e., the Midline-Estimating Statistics Of Rhythm, usually more accurate and more precise than the arithmetic mean). The time course of the circaseptan (Figure 1 A, row 2) amplitude (A, a measure of one-half of the predictable extent of change within a cycle) is shown as the distance between the two curves obtained from the fit of a 168-h cosine curve. Results (shaded lunar cycles 4 and 11, respectively) suggest that an -7-day component is amplified during the initial lunar month of the first adynamic episode but not in that of the second episode. Rows 3 and 4, and, for comparison, rows 5 and 6 of Figure 1 A, stem from the fit of a 24.0-h and a 24.8-h cosine, respectively, as shown by vertical brackets on the right. The time course of these components' acrophase (())) is shown in Figure 1A (rows 3 and 5), providing information related to the timing of overall high values recurring in each cycle. When nearing midnight (0° or 360°), (|)s are doubly plotted. The upward slanted delaying time course of the 24-h (|)s (row 3) suggests a x longer than 24.0 h. A horizontal time course of (|)s (row 5) indicates a good fit of the 24.8-h curve. Note, within the shaded columns denoting episodes of adynamia (with slanted (|)s in row 3, by contrast to more or less horizontal (|)s in row 5), that a 24-h component is demonstrable (P<0.05) only during the 46 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 first episode of lunar cycle 4 (horizontal dashed line in rows 4 and 6 corresponds to P=0.05), but that it is not consistently significant in lunar cycle 11. Synchronization with the lunar-tidal day of 24.8 h is documented by the outcomes of a complementary (more global) nonlinear analysis of monthly data. Its results are inserted numerically in this figure in row 5 as x estimates of 24.838 h and of 24.866 h, with their CIs in parentheses. During most of lunar cycle 4 (row 6, as in row 4), P<0.01 (the bottom line in rows 4 and 6 corresponds to P=0.01). In the weekly intervals analyzed in Figure 1 A, a circadian rhythm (P<0.05) is very rarely found, except for the first month of the span of lunar synchronization in cycle 4 (by contrast to monthly intervals used for the inserted nonlinear results). This finding is shared by FT's self-ratings (not shown), indicating in both women the absence of a circadian vigor rhythm, except during JF's downtimes when it is synchronized by the moon. Figure IB (top two rows) shows the time course of (|)s of two chronobiologic serial sections combined with the numerical results of a nonlinear extended cosinor analysis of JF's urine volume. The P-values (row 3) testing the "no 24.8-h or similar rhythm" assumption are mostly below 0.05. The 24-h (|)s (top row) from the fit of a 24-h cosine curve reveal a horizontal time course in the first lunar cycle examined during wellness and a delaying (upward) time course during the episode which started at the beginning of lunar cycle 2. In the second lunar cycle examined, JF's nonlinear cosinor analyses showed the 24.8-h (double tidal) x. When a 24.8-h x is fitted, the time course of (|)s (row 2) is horizontal, validating the lunidian x for urine volume. In all cases, the xs fitted to monthly intervals were statistically significant, an outcome which substantiates the need for the combined glocal (global and local) analysis in time by varying the length of the intervals used for analyzing a data series. Figure 1C shows the coexisting xs (above) and their As (below) during adynamic depression for urine volume (left) and excretion rate (right). In the absence of a laboratory and of monitoring instrumentation, urine volume can to some extent serve as a proxy for coexisting xs (Figure 1C top) with alternately dominant amplitudes (bottom). Figure 2A shows that during the first month of an episode, the double tidal x of 24.8 h can dominate the spectrum, even though a second peak of 23.78 h with a CI covering 24.0 h is also present. Figure 2B shows the time course in JF's circulation of coexisting and wrangling two xs, with the moon (diamonds) pulling harder during depression, in an unfakeable computer output. Figure 3 Aalso summarizes in the x domain the changing dominance of the society/sun during wellness and the appearances of results from the pull of the tides during variables of the blood circulation (SBP, DBP and HR) based on mostly hourly data and the results of non-overlapping monthly spans of 4-hourly salivary hormone collections. Outliers in testosterone, aldosterone and HR notwithstanding, the data are in keeping with a tug-of-war between the moon and society with a slight overshoot in the first adynamic episode (shaded), with most variables in synchrony with each other most of the time. But we encountered quite a surprise in the § domain in an inquiry that first aimed at comparing endocrine behavior for the two weeks before the full moon (FM) with that during two weeks after the full moon. The results in Figures 3B-G and Tables 2-4 show the desirability of the full set of endocrine determinations insofar as the results after a full moon, as compared to before a full moon, seemed to differ first in two sets of monthly determinations. Next, they seemed to differ as a function of depression vs. relative wellness, Table 3. Neither finding was subsequently consistent, Table 4, yet the full set of data in Tables 2-4, analyzed in Figure 3B-G, led to an un-anticipated result in the § domain, apart from a consideration of data before vs. after the full moon. A comparison of data in episodes with a mostly oblique time course of (|)s and the prior implicit assumption of 24-h synchronization during wellness did not hold. For four hormones, there is clearly desynchronization, less prominent than that during depression, also during wellness, as seen in the figures. For the results in Figure 3E, chronobiologic serial sections were applied to data at 4 h intervals on the salivary hormones of JF by the fit of a 24.0-h cosine curve to intervals of 24 h displaced with an 47 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 increment of 24 h. A smooth longitudinal time course of circadian (|)s was prepared wherein any 360° jumps were eliminated. Sequences of (|)s were then plotted separately for each lunar moon (centered on full moon, the day of full moon serving as time zero) during times of wellness or illness. There were five spans during adynamic depression (FM 12, 13, 18, 19 and 24) and eight (remaining) spans during apparent wellness. A linear trend was fitted to the sequences of (|)s during each lunar month, and the dominant circadian x derived therefrom. In order to better visualize the difference in the behavior of the circadian § between illness and wellness, § sequences were averaged across the five spans of illness and the eight spans of wellness, after normalization. Because there were differences in the average circadian (|) of a given variable among the different spans that may inflate the error term, the § on the day of full moon was set to zero and (|)s on the 14 days prior to and following the day of full moon determined relative to the § on the day of full moon. After such normalization, the (|)s of a given variable were averaged for each day of the lunar month, separately for the totals of five months of illness and the eight months of wellness. These average (|)s and their standard error are shown in Figure 3E-G. A(|) delay is readily seen during illness, corresponding to an average circadian x of-24.58 h for Cortisol, 24.54 h for DUE A, 24.53 h for melatonin, 24.32 h for aldosterone, 24.39 h for estradiol and 24.12 h for testosterone. For five hormones, the deviation from 24.0 h is significant (P<0.05), while it is of borderline significance for testosterone, as shown by the P-values from the regression lines in Figures 3E-3G. In the case of aldosterone and estradiol, the quadratic term of a second-order polynomial is also statistically significant, indicating that there was a faster § delay before full moon and a slower § delay after full moon for these two hormones. During wellness (in the absence of adynamic depression), the regression line also shows a statistically significant § delay in the case of Cortisol, DHEA, melatonin and estradiol, suggesting that for these variables, the dominant circadian x may also be somewhat longer than 24.0 h. The regression lines correspond to a circadian x of 24.11 h for Cortisol, 24.14 h for DHEA and to 24.13 h for melatonin and estradiol, close to the partly built-in "free-running from the 24.0-h society's" circadian x, clearly different (by non-overlapping CIs) from the precise 24.0-h synchronized schedule. Spironolactone, with anti-androgenic and anti-aldosterone effects, used by JF twice daily, on arising and at bedtime in a 50 mg dose, could have synchronized selectively testosterone and aldosterone, as seen during apparent wellness. Discussion A pull of the moon is suggested by the repeated finding of a 24.8-h x in JF's vigor during the first month of two consecutive episodes as well as by this x in her HR, urine volume and salivary aldosterone (not shown), attesting objectively to seleno-sensitivity in JF. The double tidal x was also found in a record of DBP of JF's granddaughter LT. We have seen a near 24.8-h x in the telemetered intraperitoneal temperature of rats kept in continuous light of low intensity in the presence (11), but not in the absence of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) (12). The desynchronization of a single variable in humans, of SBP only, yet not of oral temperature or activity, in an afebrile month of a boy with recurrent fever was found during apparent wellness (13). The coexistence of multiple behavioral circadian xs in the human circulation, endocrines, vigor, wrist activity and other variables of JF as well as in her daily awake fraction may not have been similarly demonstrated earlier. Yet, again in a single variable, sleep-wakefulness, the xs found in JF's wake fraction are replicated by a clinically healthy man while he lived on a self-selected schedule, apparently in good health, Table 5 (6). Hence in themselves the prevalence of coexisting multiple circadian xs in sleep-wakefulness need not be pathogenetic. We need to explore multiple variables for their behaviors, which can differ among variables, Figures 3B-G, and among downtimes (not shown here) which in turn happen to differ further after music therapy (14). The inter-variable differences 48 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 limit the value of urine volume to a first exploration as a proxy for some of the desynchronizations. All results on all variables are in keeping with the assumption that the moon and society (the latter in synchrony with the sun) wrangle during downtimes, even when the mechanisms underlying their interactions are unknown but point to the adrenal cortex (7). It is tempting to conclude that the moon pulls mainly during episodes of depressive adynamia, yet the sun does not fully synchronize four important circadianly variable hormones during relative wellness, as shown by the studies in the § domain (Figures 3E and F). Overall, in the light of Figures 3E-G, JF may be partly internally as well as partly externally 24-h desynchronized, even during wellness, as documented at least for Cortisol, DHEA, melatonin and estradiol, with xs close to those reported as free-running on forced (but synchronizing) unacceptable routines of sleeping and waking (4, 5) versus 24-h synchronized testosterone and aldosterone. Smith et al. (5) report (with ethnic differences) an intrinsic 24.2-h x, while Duffy et al. (4) found (with a sex difference) an intrinsic x of 24.15 (± 0.21) h, very close to the xs here noted for Cortisol, DHEA, estradiol and melatonin. Both groups (4, 5) thoroughly review the pertinent literature. New in Figures 3E-G, based on 11,700 hormone assays, are differences among endocrines even during relative wellness, since salivary testosterone was apparently fully 24-h synchronized overall, as was aldosterone, perhaps because JF was on twice-daily 50 mg of spironolactone. Certainly, JF is a case for extending the scope of laboratory technology from single samples to time scales that have a spectrum of xs much broader than the circadian region examined herein (15, 16). On the basic side, in hamsters with unilaterally ablated suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) kept in continuous light, the splitting of a circadian activity rhythm was avoided, as if two xs may stem from the separate SCNs found during desynchronization (17). Pickard and Turek (17) note further that the x of the new circadian activity rhythm following unilateral SCN ablation differed from the xs of the split rhythm and of that preceding the split. These authors suggested an interaction between the bilaterally paired suprachiasmatic nuclei in the generation of the circadian rhythm of activity. An interaction of the two nuclei described as subtractive coupling was also found by us earlier in the core temperature rhythm of rodents after unilateral SCN ablation (12, 18, 19). De la Iglesia et al. (20), in turn, using a model for non-invasively dissociating the circadian oscillator network in vivo (21), found two motor activity rhythms that reflect the separate activities of two oscillators in anatomically defined ventrolateral and dorsomedial SCN subdivisions. Welsh et al. (22) found multiple autonomous circadian oscillators discussed by Reppert and Weaver (23). Whether the multiple xs and the different endocrine behaviors stem from the SCN or the periphery remains one of the many problems for further study. So is the question of JF's half-yearly recurrence of downtimes, Table 1. Other xs modulating circadians may be expressed in JF, the near-half-yearly x in particular (24). On the critical medical side, the possible molecular basis of the likely familiar aspects of JF's problems is being explored at the NIH, with particular focus on cryptochrome (25; cf. 26). Steven Reppert considered the possibility that humans could have cryptochrome heavily expressed in the retina, as a light-sensitive magnetoreceptor, since the human version of cryptochrome 2 restored geomagnetic orientation in cryptochrome-deficient fruit flies (24; cf. 23). Also from a practical viewpoint, the familial genetic background notwithstanding, the possibility of a post-traumatic stress syndrome is best considered by magnetoencephalography (27). Event trauma is limited to an accident in 1969 in which JF's car was totaled and three people in two other vehicles were killed. The event continues to live in her emotions with a genuine distaste for travel on two-lane highways. Downtimes were not detected until 1990, however. JF also had a brief span of unconsciousness after a fall from a horse, 7 or 8 years ago. An MRI at that time showed no damage, but brain pain and tingling during the downtime, which began several days after the fall, was greater than usual. 49 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 The family has also considered the possibility of trauma from the intense years of travel as a Christian missionary, when she dealt with a different group of people and slept in different places each week, with the demands of trying to meet the practical and professional needs during the fewer than 48 h she was at home each week. Perhaps the physical push to accomplish the needed during the at home times did have an impact, thus causing increased sensitivities to magnetics. An emotional impact of her profession on JF is supported by the reoccurring stress dreams that JF has during times of high magnetic disturbance that involve her trying to get luggage packed to get to the airport in time. The possible merits of a systematic attempt at synchronization by light and melatonin are indicated, preferably with the concomitant sampling of marker rhythms, whatever the underlying mechanism may be. That the moon must be considered as affecting living matter was advocated by many and documented recently by Miroslav Mikulecky, among others (10, 28; cf. 29-38), even though the topic is contested (39). It seems more difficult to separate lunar and solar effects by their about-monthly cycles, although an attempt has been made to compare in neonates the association of frequencies found in their physiology with the rotation of the sun around its axis in ~27-days at its equator on the one hand and with lunar xs on the other hand (40). The difference between 24.0 and 24.8 h between the societal and solar day on the one hand and the lunidian x on the other hand is here regarded as decisive. The underlying mechanisms of selenosensitivity, being investigated at the NIH, remain to be elucidated at the molecular level. REFERENCES: 1. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Otsuka K, Katinas G, Schwartzkopff O. Essays on chronomics spawned by transdisciplinary chronobiology: Witness in time: Earl Elmer Bakken. Neuroendocrinol Lett 2001; 22: 359-384. 2. Halberg Franz, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Syutkina EV, Sothern RB, Zaslavskaya R, Halberg Francine, Watanabe Y, Schwartzkopff O, Otsuka K, Tarquini R, Perfetto P, Siegelova J. Transdisciplinary unifying implications of circadian findings in the 1950s. J Orcadian Rhythms 2003; 1: 2. 61 pp. www.JCircadianRhvthms.com/content/pdf/1740-3391 -2-3.pdf 3. Halberg F. Physiologic considerations underlying rhythmometry, with special reference to emotional illness. Symposium on Biological Cycles and Psychiatry. In: de Ajuriaguerra J. (Ed.) Symposium Bel-Air III. Cycles biologiques et psychiatric Geneva: Georg / Paris: Masson et Cie; 1968. p. 73-126. 4. 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Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Sothern RB, Katinas GS, Schwartzkopff O, Otsuka K. Cycles tipping the scale between death and survival (= "life"). Progress of Theoretical Physics 2008; Suppl. 173: 153-181. 17. Pickard GE, Turek FW. Splitting of the circadian rhythm of activity is abolished by unilateral lesions of the suprachiasmatic nuclei. Science 1982; 215: 1119-1121. 18. Halberg F, Lubanovic WA, Sothern RB, Brockway B, Powell EW, Pasley IN, Scheving LE. Nomifensine chronopharmacology, schedule shifts and circadian temperature rhythms in di-suprachiasmatically lesioned rats - modeling emotional chronopathology and chronotherapy. Chronobiologia 1979; 6: 405-424. 19. Refinetti R, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Unilateral SCN ablation amplifies while bilateral SCN ablation dampens the circadian rhythm in core temperature of hamsters. Proceedings, International Conference on the Frontiers of Biomedical Science: Chronobiology, Chengdu, China, September 24-26, 2006, p. 196-198. 20. de la Iglesia HO, Cambras T, Schwartz WJ, Diez-Noguera A. Forced desynchronization of dual circadian oscillators within the rat suprachiasmatic nucleus. Current Biology 2004; 14: 796-800. 21. Campuzano A, Vilaplana J, Cambras T, Diez-Noguera A. Dissociation of the rat motor activity rhythm under T cycles shorter than 24 hours. Physiol Behav 1998; 63: 171-176. 22. Welsh DK, Logothetis DE, Meister M, Reppert SM. Individual neurons dissociated from rat suprachiasmatic nucleus express independently phased circadia firing rhythms. Neuron 1995; 14: 697-706. 23. Reppert SM, Weaver DR. Molecular analysis of mammalian circadian rhythms. Annu Rev Physiol 2001; 63: 647-676. 24. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Pöllmann L, Pöllman B, Katinas GS, Minne H, Breus T, Sothern RB, Watanabe Y, Tarquini R, Perfetto F, Maggioni C, Wilson D, Gubin D, Otsuka K, Bakken EE. Circasemiannual chronomics: half-yearly biospheric changes in their own right and as a circannual waveform. Biomed & Pharmacother 2003; 57 (Suppl 1): 45s-54s. 51 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 25. Foley LE, Gegear RJ, Reppert SM. Human cryptochrome exhibits light-dependent magnetosensitivity. Nature Communications 2011; 2: 356. DOI: 10.1038/ncommsl364. 26. Keim B. Humans could have geomagnetic sight. Wired, June 21, 2011. http://www.wired.com/ wiredscience/2011/06/geomagnetic-vision/ 27. Georgopoulos AP, Tan H-RM, Lewis SM, Leuthold AC, Winskowski AM, Lynch JK, Engdahl B. The synchronous neural interactions test as a functional neuromarker for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): a robust classification method based on the bootstrap. J Neural Eng 2010; 7: 016011. 7 pp. doi:l0.1088/1741-2560/7/1/016011 28. Mikulecky M Sr. Farewell to the Internal Clock: A Contribution to the Field of Chronobiology [book review]. Biologia 2009; 64: 225-227. 29. Mikulecky M. My heart, the earth, the moon and the sun. In: Mikulecky M (Ed.) Sun, Moon and Living Matter. Bratislava, Slovakia, June 28-July 1, 1994. Bratislava: Slovak Medical Society; 1994. p. 150-157. 30. Mikulecky M. Circa(ultra)dian and -lunidian periodicity in arrhythmia attacks. Eur J Internal Med 2001; 12: 195/P245. 31. Brown FA Jr, Chow CS. Lunar-correlated variations in water uptake by bean seeds. Biol Bull 1973; 145: 265-278. 32. Palmer JD. The clocks controlling the tide-associated rhythms of intertidal animals. BioEssays 2000; 22: 32-37. 33. Barnwell FH, Halberg F, Cornelissen G. Chronomics of an intertidal fiddler crab's locomotor activity under aquatically tideless laboratory conditions. Proceedings, International Conference on the Frontiers of Biomedical Science: Chronobiology, Chengdu, China, September 24-26, 2006, p. 89-92. 34. Miles LEM, Raynal DM, Wilson MA. Blind man living in normal society has circadian rhythms of 24.9 hours. Science 1977; 198: 421-423. 35. Barlow P. Foreword. In: Klein G. Farewell to the Internal Clock. Berlin: Springer; 2007. p. vii-xx. 36. Zürcher E. Mondbezogene Traditionen in der Forstwirtschaft und Phaenomene in der Baumbiologie. Schweiz Z Forstwes 2000; 151: 417-424. 37. Barlow PW, Klingele E, Klein G, Mikulecky M. Leaf movements of bean plants and lunar gravity. Plant Signal Behav 2008; 3: 1083-1090. 38. Burr HS. Tree potentials. Yale J Biol Med 1947; 19/3: 311-318. 39. Kelly IW, Rotton J, Culver R. The moon was full and nothing happened: a review of studies of the moon and human behavior and human belief. In: Nickeil J, Karr B, Genoni J. (Eds.) The Outer Edge. New York: CSICOP; 1996. p. 16-34. 40. Halberg F, Breus TK, Cornelissen G, Bingham C, Hillman DC, Rigatuso J, Delmore P, Bakken E, International Womb-to-Tomb Chronome Initiative Group: Chronobiology in space. Keynote, 37th Ann. Mtg. Japan Soc. for Aerospace and Environmental Medicine, Nagoya, Japan, November 8-9, 1991. University of Minnesota/Medtronic Chronobiology Seminar Series, #1, December 1991, 21 pp. of text, 70 figures. 52 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 replicated lunar synchronization of JFs vigor during first month (SHADED) of (two-month-long) adynamia episodes* PERIOD 1W (hours | I DO Ml —i-r- A i i d F If W -168.0 l t A * put 25,1*7 \ ; i T :VL; w: (a4.Mi 2Bj -a?o 00 II 7Mareri*2009 * i.i.i.i.i.i.HniHniiiiyriFiiiiiHBiMH t T * ■ Iff 11 1* 13 14 time (lunar cycles) 1apri201d 'Dssfiod wjrtiea l«os fjd moons (Jf- reports scnsmvrtt id Ihe moon] N data 2820. .■nienral IBB noun, ineremBf* 12 hous Figure 1A. Self-rated vigor-wellness of JF during the first 14 lunar months of study. © Halberg. 53 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Near-horizontal time course of arcadian acmphaaes, +*, when the lit It r1ght(*k*ihtl) suggests 2A hour synchronization in i fintlunir month [top row) followed by i double tidal puJI of water metabolism with transient 24B4-h synchronization (fow ?)* 12 3 4« TIME (days; dashed vertical lines Indicate full moons] * Orcadian acre phase of urine wfcjrre of a 62-year-Qtt woman, JF, in voiding 5 from 25 Moy to 1 Od 2D10 prepared with he fi! of a 24 00-h (top row) or 24 84 h (middfe low) cosine cum to data in 163-h intervals, displaced in 12-h increments fN=767) jf s synchronised by ?4 On sooely belore an episode of depression starting in Lnar cycle 2, when she is synchronized with tie fcinidian 24 cycb in most of cycle 2 and in the brer pan of cycle 4 Society and the moon compete in cycle 3 and early cycle 4. the moon tesynchjonisng her We n cycle 4 P-vabe tor row 1 nol shown, but similarly mostly significant Figure IB. Chronobiologic serial sections suggest 24-h synchrony during wellness in a first lunar cycle and desynchronization thereafter with a 24.84-h x in the first month of desynchronization. Subsequently, the § advances, i.e., the x shortens until it reaches a 24-h length. © Halberg. 54 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Pugg HlMJMiM illnjklw * ►w m +. 1 ! Aft I: £ A ■ * 1 1 m P V i jf if «vi uwmm .•: i-i »-■ V i ■ ■ 1 J ted ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ft »te« **** Figure 1C. Alternately dominating coexisting circadian (~24.0-h and longer) xs in the urine volume (left, top) and excretion rate (right, top) as seen from their amplitudes (bottom). © Halberg. I. i near -Non 11 neaf Cosinor of Heart Rate of JF* Period (hours) 4__*a_J4_18_12_ 24 S0< 24 62 24 981 * a 62 year u(d iBtenc-iensttiuH *tnman during the first 31 days of an rid, full nid episode in the summei nf 20 >0 [2010/07/07 to 2010/06^/1 Figure 2A. Coexisting separate circadian xs in JF's HR during an episode of depression with adynamia. © Halberg. 55 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Coexisting Societal-Solar 24.0-hour (dots) and Lunar 24.9-hour (diamonds) Components Dominating during Wellness and Illness, respectively (JF, F, B2y) SBP DSP HR Pariod Estimate aid 35% CI 3» w I ■ 1 »1- 240* 00 lOApflO 20 a; iQAplQ 24 Oil 09 Amplitude EstJmjrtB and 95% CI is I □ ftp- i □ ?t Sop ISSepIO ID Apr ID HM09 IDApID ZSSep Time (calendar date) Cgtw»nhBrt nwlinwr w*n«i™ a* potioft and 95%-CI* in ^-vwrtwndtww mmwd by 1-wok ingmorncfii* Figure 2B. Time course of two separate circadian xs in JF's circulation. © Halberg. Tug-of-wir between Sun and Society (Z4,0n period) verm* Moon (Z4.fth period) Pulling duhng adynamic dipreeaion, wtiileduring wellneaa 4 of G hormonea "tret-run" ISA ■V=~----------w ---T#s[u Bl-ei (Hie ■ 5BP m DHEft E:1j h.i a Mriatomn HR □ TkiM (calendar dale| Figure 3A. Wrangling between the moon on the one hand and society/sun on the other hand in JF's endocrines as in her circulation, with the pull of the tides lengthening the dominant x during depression. © Halberg. 56 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Cortisol 160 * - 270 -*—FJJ1J —O—FU13 - « - RJ1J * PM1* fMl? —*- - ^MI9 ■ • flMM ■ ■ * ■ FM21 —□—f«H - —■—FUH -15 -10 -SOS Time (days vs. FM=0) 10 15 DHEA -570 -SOS Time (days vs. FM=0J Figure 3B. Time course of (|)s for two weeks before (-1 to -15 days) and after (+1 to +15 days) the full moon (=0) for JF's salivary Cortisol and DHEA. © Halberg. 57 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Melatonin -570 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Time (days vs. FM=0) Figure SC. Time course of (|)s for two weeks before (-1 to -15 days) and after (+1 to +15 days) the full moon (=0) for JF's salivary melatonin and estradiol. © Halberg. 58 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Aldosterone 5TO I Time [days vs. FM"4) Figure 3D. Time course of (|)s for two weeks before (-1 to -15 days) and after (+1 to +15 days) the full moon (=0) for JF's salivary testosterone and aldosterone. © Halberg. 59 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Cortisol 16« -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Time (days vs. FM-Q) DHEA ■ ISO —*—Adynamic depression Time (days vs. FM-0) Figure 3E. Oblique (desynchronized) time course of JF's (|)s during depression is much less prominent during wellness, but present in salivary Cortisol and DHEA. © Halberg. 60 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Melatonin -180 —♦—Adynamic depiession 34 r V ■.l-i-Ki: T* if d la □ ji3b ■1 DDI 14 Bl r is 0ai3 IB 4M31 4 ■• n 11 04-1 PHI* 14 -"■ w Pi* 4 'H c-wi 24*7 O 14 4J**1 4 !*• ♦ 07 041 ■■.....n.n 14 Ll d4 q v !h 34 [1 4 07 -j i\ 1 V 0 1 J- 0T1 T#-im«Jtprpnp M 41 *a * J* O^ir r ■ ■: * 4 J* u ■ 1 40 4JM 4 ll hum: r ir 11 }4 »9 tflT tin 14 M 4 11 0ehh a 4* 41741 1 bl3 U O ITf. 4CVt4 Ehl'oBlKjl 14 *4 ib- d It □ iB6 4P40I *■'■■■>'' If 14 Jh 21 A It a h j+ 4 ih l"v 4 It ■a tin r-HWi ■04' 4*3* ■ B4J 1« j' ra A 14 n i r» dun 74 eh d 14 □ 3h 41 1« Mil ■ 11 ■ 14 44 3*J «i tw= j4 01 f 0* p71» □hj3 L. ib- 4] 14 1- 30 1j d 17 nan a Dai 34. do- d 0*1 ■ BOH b HU -a 41 0 ji 3 3' 1+ 74 DO & 1) a l m 11 Crtlt npi 4] 3d ■r, 11,« 3 Ml -0 10 0.H 0 70 -.I-, |« 71 IB □ 3d BBI1 i1r a am iBUI fl BBU -dos D b4 O 34 *• 74 d7 nil D d4d bbu ib 14 V 13; r ?iB 4> 13j 0 34 0 H PMC* ft 44 D7 II 14« 4J <■*■* 11 « 1« 0 140 4.11 0.01 1 jo Wil.iir-fui I* 33 ba □ id D Hi a run 74 1D Bj IP ■0*41 0 TJ- a ■* 0 » ...... THIVilWri^ilHi 1* 71 b4 0 ■* -0 1 n 41 TCffl 71 4* « 14 0 "1 a ** 0 H m ■ • t-i i>» Bl' a ■ •'• i M' 44 a pt ■i r.->: 4*1 0 1f 1* 21 ■* 4« UN' a 01« JI.U 0 1*t 0 B4X 1 M 04F i *l> \■?*•}■• 1* J J u * +t 4 Ala *4 a B H d-15t ■ q 4» d iB- 1 441 M I) 1b, ft f34 «414 r> *t 4 4H 4 H4 4Dt VII D J 1 Vh'lnl . H 0 4)« . Q4HB a Ll.' r< di ElJl 4 111 a in D an a 3c 1 4tft "1 d tiki 4MB 14 3- d IP a i^d a +Ba a ?ij d4i ■ 4*1 lli J-C I*. D ST Ll a J1 ■ j4 a>i □ M Dill d 3 IB! D DO d4b DCW MIJIIlTrr 1« H » & « .n jn a 377 74 d7 □ li 41 an D HJ D 34) u» 1 it Cunvi fT 4 it DOM 41 b-w ' 1 bb o m imp d D 1U 444 4 01 ■■■il 1 i* an « Dm D 114 □ b fcf : * « □ 11 a ui ft ^14 0 a? 404 ■ 44 wiii.-- lJ r BBlU ■La-'UHi i* n ■ i D ii -L 1*1 d HI 74 Dl 0 317 ««« 0*71, 0 14 041 a «i Fimsint it D 'B 0 441 74 V 0 0O10 0 '0 141 j M J* d37 P-S7T f* » n ?b « id« ft 0» 441 ■ u Table 2: When 4-h endocrine salivary sampling around the clock for 6 months does not suffice, shortening of circadian period (x) of 6 hormones in 2-week intervals after full moons (FM) vs. before FM in JF's episode of depression (shaded FM) vs. wellness, does not hold in the next 9 months (see Table 3) *Period estimated from phase behavior: FM number 12 refers to the 12th FM investigated on JF, a 61-year-old woman at start of study. The first FM was on March 11, 2009, at 02:40 Universal Time and the 12th bracketed by the start of hormone assays on January 30 at 06:19. Note dangers of extrapolating from limited data since during FM 12-14, 15 out of 15 comparisons in a downtime and in the month thereafter revealed a shortening following FM. In the case of FM 15, 3 hormones had shorter periods and 3 others had longer ones. In FM 16 and 17 all periods lengthened or did not change after FM. It is tempting to attribute the shortening after FM to depression in FMs 12 and 13 and to interpret FM 14 as a transient aftereffect on the basis of 6 months of 4-hourly assays of 6 hormones. Table 3, however, does not show these differences in behavior in episodes vs. during relative wellness. Shading of FM indicates episodes of adynamic depression. 64 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ml . * llllMII 191» ■• . * fa 0 cm - > B ■<-.:■<■ i ■ 10 "4 ■->- < ;j ?i o la •.141 d4« 01* 077 IB MM j 3' o rvj ( sen 0 2* □ me one d t* om 11 SAM *«i g ru 0001 77 jo 04» ««n □ -i» 1 ** an ft Mil • 21 0M1 014« 74 31 • 11 BUS 0C54 BB2 gas 1» 74 )1 931 0 w Q km 74 «J Oil MM 0 0» 4 OB 047 IB Mir • ■<•' 01« 0 4«] OS* SI Ml 0 03T 017 D 04 111 b» *1W osej 31 tu 0 »r ao4i cms BOB 0 03 1* 7* U a 30 ana AOS MM OJT 0 2« (l rn- 41 ft 0 41 11 74 5* 030 a mm 4 Q IT M«n oh 0 47» 0 117 4) W 044 a »*fl en Dili •am 7* 30 0 ii OOlT 1 10 033 m MJS Oil DM '0 0c1 241» 0 -7 -S-.r 4>flJ -SI .■ t. 0 12 ■00c1 j4h* O 13 c Ml j .. r -O tt 0 24 n »1 i» 0 li OUT 0 04] 2* TO 037 I HE C 0*4 1*7 • 31 24 « art g«t »1(4 Mil til OM] 0 710 il ait ™ M)l a ji 030* ■ Mil 0 34 OUJ 0 041 071 ii ■« at ■J n Olt „ ■ SJ01 14 u> 0 21 c 1*91 OnO* 0 4« 041 ■ i 11 Ml oi* 4 133 ■ MS M t» 0 IT 0 »11 0 2«i OM 040 31 1> W a 5» B t« 0001 34 07 D 11 0 0*3 0 7H *r Oil ti q j* «»■ 0-h1 24 jr dm OHO 0 319 0*2 oai li JiSO OH * 44ji 0 ■» •"405 Q If OOftl ■MS 0»3 04* 21 11T1 OH -»71» OTTO 7700 oja 41 OM 0776 eta OA* » 13 ffl a IB 004» M 1» 0 IT run 02hi a m l)U 0 i» -a j is 0 003 ■ Us) *i-o OBT! 04* a v 71 nn 0 07 a tn 0 24 li ft 11 oh* ■jM 0*1 on 21 37 0J 0 33 -0 44« a no 71 B3 OM « 174 OM1 c» 0*0 ■ mi 0 14 -0 4M 0 01» 71*4 0 30 .. eu 0 40 JIM 0-31 «m1 oira 77 45 ; m 43 MU noma 0 1« OH 79 »n : n 0 ie J 0 1« 74 41 a it DDIS 0092 417T 0 17 » I JO 0OT1 V. it- m .* Ml 0 3*1 «111 on 0*7 i* j-em 0 17 o pn u 3^ 77 rr 0 14 n 0 140 0 4* oh CM COtT «U1 M re 1! M ni» Bit? 1 a boo n MM 1 m D DID 0 MP 24 13 C It 07*4 am i m Oar » M4M »1* 0 010 MM c3b 0M7 a i«a 0 11 oaa ■* Mil • 11 »711 QTJB 31 0' 0 tw □ OJT Ol» oh m a is? 14 71 on 0*77 oajT OB3 044 la MAI a rl 3 4-< 14 M «'« OM 01- rm 74 ■» • » ■ nir JIM 1 -4H :l-4 OBI 0*7 m J4«j* B31 asuo 0 b1ft 11 h a.21 Q7M 104 ■5 4b m an bid 3 mr llto 041 3H4 •Ma 1« OH an i 23 131 aam Oil t 31 037 OBI 0 sc 4- ji 1 M a «1 • au HI o*s i H 121 l TO 2» 2M 0 07 lb 1 Ml 270 OH 1 H OM i 10 d«4 J 03 I 07 ■JIB 0*7 111 344 i 47 01* 4 70 i M Table 3: As compared to Table 2, a different behavior of the endocrines in relation to the full moon (FM) is seen, notably during JF's downtimes (shaded FM) * *9 increases out of 19 in FMs 18, 19 and 24 (rather than 0 in depression). The data of Tables 2 and 3 led to Figure 3B. 65 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 *rhfto< 1« ■ u-+ CM 14 A«i A m AC r ft *• 1 ■■*"v4 t»J m 11 . ■ a 1 ] OBJ4 ■OBOt 14*1 a in 9*11 -O go' A IA D :.i 1» 14 M I it i> v» ■ .■ jo- 4* A J J A »14 □ ooj -AAA c 1. a* 7B • 4« 6 414 0 1 JA 71 AT D 1* ■ J ib* IHt a 4 ■ «4» ■ ■ J* a 11 0 HO 0 34 14 a »i ATI*. ö J 4 it II DU C if otis i. 33* 74 JA 0 i» a 441 1 ■, '! .■ I ■ • M 11 il *■ ■ I* C QU »AM 73 *« • ■ > dji: AAA* 0« AIM IB J* 7* Ad* • in< 3* A3 • *>r «DBft> •« •* A 34 1* 14 » ' r : • J -■ ' A 14« 4 t> a bAbj ^ i;w ■A» A 41 -■.1 3» ** n "*j i: -a, *. •a 1 ?4 ... 4 1-1 PA4> * tif 1 10 A 11 M it ft d 1« ü 1»:. 0 TO! 4* 1* 4 33 A 111 A frn j 4*1 » ft r.i a n j ■- 04A 3* 1a 6 A j-ft ** AT a *j »MI . *» *m OA* I* -' u.. |.n . 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Initial x guesses for the 6 nonlinearly searched xs were 24.84, 24.43, 24.26, 24.00, 12.42 and 12.00 h. Results were omitted if they did not converge to a x fitted to the data, in which case the analysis was redone after removal of these components from the model, to yield results summarized herein. Some xs converged well but the CI of the A covered zero, as apparent from a negative sign inside the last column's first, fourth and fifth rows, for the case of lunar and tidal associations in the first subspan (top) where the societal 24-h day predominates. The lunar (double tidal) effects converge invariably thereafter. Note that overlaps of zero by the CI of the A are very small. The near-lunar (double tidal) cycle's A is invariably positive and in 2 of 5 sections has the largest A when the moon dominates over society in clinical health. Prof. Franz Halberg, M.D., Dr. h. c. multi Director Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Dept. of Laboratory Midi cine, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 67 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 INFRADIANS IN HUMAN BLOOD PRESSURE, HEART RATE AND BODY WEIGHT DURING 35 YEARS OF AGING Franz Halberg1, Germaine Cornelissen1, William R. Best2, Dewayne Hillman1, Othild Schwartzkopff1 1 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA 2 Hines VA Medical Center, Hines, IL, USA Abstract. In once-daily morning measurements of systolic (S) and diastolic (D) blood pressure (BP) and body weight (BW) and in a 17-year series of heart rate (HR) of a treated hypertensive man (WRB), we assess putative infradian cycles (with periods, xs, >28 hours). We analyze separately the aging of the 7-day (septan) Midline-Estimating Statistic of Rhythm (MESOR) and amplitude by applying the nonlinearly extended cosinor to intermediate computations (imputations), by fitting 7-day cosine curves to consecutive non-overlapping 14-day sections of the original data. Some of the xs found are a putative mimicry of cycles in solar activity, but for causal relations a subtraction (and/or addition) approach will be essential and is illustrated for another case. Background. Chronomics, a cartography of chronomes (time structures, consisting of rhythms, trends and chaos) in and around us, has yielded a few pages of an as-yet fledgling atlas of transdisciplinary rhythms that cover a wide range of frequencies: some are photic in origin, such as about 24-hour (circadian) and about-yearly (circannual) cycles, now broadly recognized as partly built-in entities in their own right; others are non-photic components found in particle radiation from the sun and the galaxy, partly in helio-geomagnetics, gravity, UV flux, and/or possibly in other measurable weather in extraterrestrial space. SjUpiii: Rlnttd Pniiun DkiUaHc Tflmd Prtuurt Figure 1. Time plots of original data of WRB cannot be interpreted in terms of the uncertainties of any xs characterizing them. © Halberg 68 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Pairs of is in two or more aligned time series, congruent insofar as they have some overlying or at least partly overlapping CIs (95% confidence intervals) of their xs are seen when these series are analyzed with the extended linear-nonlinear cosinor (1-3). Congruence is found, for instance, among helio-geomagnetic activity indices themselves and among some of these and vascular spectral components, notably in BP and HR (studied over decades around the clock), in the spectral regions, among others, of 1 cycle in I. about 7-days, the circaseptans (4); II. about 5 months, the quinmensal (5, 6); III. the transyears (longer than [beyond = trans] a calendar year) (7); IV. the Horrebow-Schwabe sunspot cycle of about 11 years (8, 9); V. a global cycle of about 17 years (10); VI. the Hale sunspot bipolarity cycle of about 22 years (11); and VII. the tridecadal BEL of about 30-40 years currently extensively documented (12-20). The uncertainties of these cycles are mapped as yet in only a few longitudinal around-the-clock series of measurements, and this investigation, to our knowledge is the first to do such cartography on single values/day, collected on awakening, subject to qualifications (19). Earlier (7, 21-24; cf. 25-28), we had focused upon transyears (components with xs longer than one year but shorter than 1.9 years). These can be far-transyears (1.2 years < [x - CI] < [x + CI] < 1.9 years) with the CI of x within these limits or near-transyears (1.00 year < [x - CI] < [x + CI] < 1.20 years) with the entire CI of x within these limits. We had also focused on quinmensals (5, 6), slightly shorter than a half-year, predicted by Wolff (29),found by other physicists in solar flares (30, 31). Congruent transyear xs of the solar wind's speed (33, 34) were detected in physiology (22-24, 35, 36). They were discovered in sudden cardiac death in some locations and in cardiac arrhythmia during some time spans during some solar cycle stages (7, 37). Near-transyears found in biology (37) prompted us to discover them in the solar magnetism, solar wind and geomagnetics (38; cf. 37). Results after 30 years (39). A physician (WRB) began self-monitoring BW, SBP and DBP when he was a few months short of 52 years of age and continued for 35 years. During the most recent 17 years, he also recorded his HR. WRB had started hypotensive therapy (chlorthalidone 50 mg/d) in June 1972 and had a good, sustained BP response. He began recording frequent serial BP values on graph paper in April 1974, since he planned to reduce the dosage and wanted to know the effects of such reduction. This graphing of his data helped him to arrive at self-medication decisions. A first set of extended cosinor analyses was presented earlier (39). Here, we focus on the broader spectrum, including the transtridecadal BEL noted previously. Table 1: Para-tridecadal periods with the concomitant fit of a linear trend in the 30-year series Variable (units) Period (years) Double amplitude, 2A Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) 31.68 [23.94, 39.42] 9.24 [5.26, 13.22] Body weight (lbs) 41.23 [31.25, 51.20] 6.62 [3.60, 9.62] * Decreasing trend in DBP, increasing trend in BW (not shown). 69 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Non-Photic Components in the Circulation of a MESOR-Hypertensive Man (WRB) Awaiting Further Analyses Systolic Blood Pressure 1974-2094 (30y; N=9247} 10 30 3D 10 50 ED 70 Frequency [cyclnßOyvars) AO SO 100 Diastolic Blood Pressure 1974-2004 (30y; N-S247) 1 I »4^ 0 37* 10 20 30 40 50 GO 70 30 90 Freq uency (eye le sHOyea rs ] 100 Figure 2. Linear least squares spectra of blood pressure of WRB: first 30 years. © Halberg. 70 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Non-Photic Components in the Physiology of a MESOR-Hypertensive Man (WRB) Awaiting Further Analyses Heart Rate 1S93-2MW(11y;N=371M| 10 20 3D 40 50 SO 70 BO 90 100 Frequency (cyelestfOyeara] Body Weight 1974-3 O04(30y; N=9774) 13 20 30 40 50 GO 70 80 Frequency [cycles/30years] 90 100 Figure 3. Linear least squares spectra of heart rate and body weight of WRB: first 30 years. © tHalberg. 71 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 PERIODS CHARACTERIZING AVERAGE (MESOR) AND SEVEN-DAY-CYCLE DOUBLE AMPLITUDE (2A) DURING 35 YEARS OF SELF-MEASURED MORNING SYSTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE OF WRB* 32.1Í28.1,36,1}, 6.32(6.06,6.58), 2.47(2.41,2.52) y 19744/23 1983/3/30 1992/2/29 2001/1/29 2009/12/31 TIME (Calendar Date] * man, 52 years of age at start; Increment and Interval analyzed: 14 days Figure 4. Different periods approximate the time course of the MESOR (upper curve) and the double circadian amplitude (lower curve) in systolic blood pressure of WRB during 35 years. © Halberg. The about 30-year component in SBP and DBP and a component also qualifying as a para-tridecadal by a CI of the x covering part of the 30-40 year range constituted an exciting new finding on a revisited forgotten yet vindicated BEL periodicity (33; cf. 5-13, 34, 35). Figure 1 displays the original data covering the first 3 decades for SBP, DBP and BW. Eyeballing sees changes that differ in BW from those in BP, but objective analyses are needed, although the naked eye rules out linear increases or decreases with age. Accordingly, Figures 2 and 3 show cosinor spectra. Figure 2 (top) shows for SBP, among other components, a far-transyear of 1.6-year length, with an amplitude numerically larger than that of the calendar-yearly component, which is also present in the least squares spectrum. As seen in Figure 2 (bottom), DBP also shows a far-transyear of 1.6-year length and a near-transyear of 1.13-year length, both much larger in amplitude than the calendar-yearly component. The most prominent component in DBP has a x of about 16.7 years, the possible signature of a global Makarov and Sivaraman (10) cycle. A cis-half-year, as the quinmensal (about 5-month) component was originally called, is further seen in SBP (Figure 2, top) with a x of about 0.37 year as well as in DBP along with a second quinmensal of 0.46-year length. For HR, Figure 3 (top) shows a relatively broad band in the spectrum with a peaklet at 1.56 years, and another component in the neighborhood of the calendar year, a near-cisyear, and further a quinmensal at a x of 0.45-year length. BW (Figure 3, bottom) shows a far-transyear of 1.63 years and a near-transyear of 1.03 years, along with a peaklet at 0.4 year, a quinmensal, and no calendar-yearly component. Other anticipated non-photic components seen in Figures 2 and 3 suffice to suggest that non-photic effects were prominent in several variables in the subject investigated, awaiting nonlinear analysis. 72 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 The putative mimicry of a circadecadal Horrebow-Schwabe cycle in HR is of 11.7 years, whereas in BW it is of 12.5 years, Figure 3. Linear-nonlinear analyses by the extended cosinor (1-3), using 35 years as trial x, yielded a clear tridecadal spectral component only for SBP, the x [CI] being estimated as 30.56 [29.24, 31.87] years and the double amplitude (2A) as 18.06 [16.92, 19.20] mmHg, hardly a trivial extent of change. For BW, the x was 28.14 [26.66, 29.63] years and the 2A was 3.58 [3.34, 3.84] lbs. Analyses did not converge for DBP, perhaps because this variable was characterized by a decreasing trend with age, apparent in Figure 4. Using a slightly different model that includes a linear trend with the BEL cycle and a trial x of 32.17 years, results were compatible with the presence of a BEL cycle in all 3 variables investigated on the 30-year series, as shown in Table 1, since for body weight the CI of x is well within the 20-30-year range. PERIODS CHARACTERIZING AVERAGE (MESOR) AND SEVEN-DAY-CYCLE DOUBLE AMPLITUDE (2A) DURING 35 YEARS OF SELF-MEASURED MORNING DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE OF WRB* 1974/4/29 1983/3/30 1992/2/29 2001/1/29 2009/12/31 TIME {Calendar Date) * man, 52 years of age at start; Increment and Interval analyzed: 14 days Figure 5. Different xs approximate the time course of the MESOR (upper curve) and the double circadian amplitude (lower curve) in diastolic blood pressure of WRB during 35 years. © Halberg. Results after 35 years. Table 2 summarizes analyses on the original data of 30 years of morning measurements that included 3 components with a x whose CI overlapped the 30-40-year range. This para-tridecadal x could be reproduced after the addition of 5 additional years of data in the MESOR (M) of SBP. A para-tridecadal remained prominent, as also seen by the naked eye in Figure 4 (upper curve), along with a 6.3-year x (which could mimic a third harmonic of the about 22-year Hale cycle and a 2.47-year x that was also found in the MESOR of DBP. An about 12.9-year x was found with a parabolic trend (t2) in the 7-day (septan) amplitude (used instead of the circadian amplitude that could not be determined in single measurements/day). 73 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Table 2A: Analyses on a time series of 30 years length 29 Apr 1974 [HR: 13 Sep 1993] - 31 Dec 2004 (-31 years; HR: -11 years) Trial x: -35 years Variable x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 30.56 [29.24, 31.87] 9.03 [8.46, 9.60] DBP (+ LT) 31.68 [23.94, 39.42] 4.62 [2.63, 6.61] HR — — BW (+ LT) 41.23 [31.25, 51.20] 3.31 [1.80, 4.81] Trial x: 15 years x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 12.55 [11.73, 13.37] 2.66 [1.93, 3.39] DBP 16.29 [15.79, 16.79] converges to 31.68 years with LT 4.29 [3.89, 4.68] HR HR (+ LT) 12.68 [10.68, 14.68] 5.90 [5.34, 6.45] 2.25 [1.76, 2.75] 1.70 [1.13, 2.27] BW BW (+ LT) 12.52 [12.18, 12.87] 12.58 [12.20, 12.96] 1.23 [1.08, 1.38] 1.23 [1.07, 1.39] Trial x: 7 years Variable x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 6.14 [6.00, 6.28] 3.39 [2.66, 4.11] DBP DBP (+ LT) 6.21 [6.05, 6.37] 6.26 [6.08, 6.44] 2.01 [1.55, 2.47] 1.55 [1.17, 1.94] HR HR (+ LT) converges to 12.68 y ears converges to 5.90 years BW BW (+ LT) 6.06 [5.96, 6.16] 6.09 [5.98, 6.19] 1.01 [0.86, 1.17] 1.05 [0.89, 1.22] 74 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Table 2B: Analyses on a longer 35-year series (5 additional years) 29 Apr 1974 [HR: 13 Sep 1993] - 31 Dec 2009 (-36 years; HR: -16 years) Trial x: 35 years Trial x: 35 years + linear trend (LT) Variable x [95% CI] A [95% CI] x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 31.92 [30.38, 33.47] 8.06 [7.55, 8.57] — — DBP — — 22.06 [21.23, 22.90] 2.85 [2.51, 3.18] HR 22.36 [17.96, 26.75] 2.48 [2.12, 2.84] — — BW 24.23 [23.62, 24.84] 1.77 [1.64, 1.89] 24.40 [23.71, 25.09] 1.76 [1.63, 1.90] Trial x: 15 years Trial x: 15 years + LT x [95% CI] A [95% CI] x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 13.32 [12.35, 14.29] 1.83 [1.17, 2.49] 13.87 [12.67, 15.07] 1.76 [1.06, 2.46] DBP 18.40 [17.88, 18.92] 4.27 [3.86, 4.87] Converges to 22.05 HR converges to 22.36 — — BW 13.25 [12.91, 13.59] 1.14 [1.01, 1.27] 13.24 [12.84, 13.64] 1.14 [1.00, 1.29] Trial x: 7years Trial x: 7years + LT x [95% CI] A [95% CI] x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 7.92 [7.58, 8.85] 1.99 [1.35, 2.63] 7.60 [7.28, 7.91] 2.11 [1.44, 2.78] DBP 7.44 [7.18, 7.69] 1.62 [1.17, 2.06] 6.34 [6.18, 6.50] 1.31 [0.97, 1.66] HR 7.62 [7.00, 8.24] 1.26 [0.83, 1.70] 5.69 [5.32, 6.05] 1.30 [0.88, 1.71] BW 6.65 [6.55, 6.76] 0.92 [0.79, 1.06] 6.62 [6.51, 6.73] 0.92 [0.77, 1.97] Trial x: 6 years Trial x: 6 years + LT x [95% CI] A [95% CI] x [95% CI] A [95% CI] SBP 6.08 [5.94, 6.20] 2.84 [2.19, 3.48] 6.02 [5.89, 6.15] 2.94 [2.26, 3.62] DBP 6.04 [5.85, 6.21] 1.46 [1.00, 1.91] 6.34 [6.18, 6.50] 1.31 [0.97, 1.66] HR converges to 7.62 5.69 [5.32, 6.05] 1.29 [0.88, 1.71] BW converges to 6.65 converges to 6.62 75 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 PERIODS CHARACTERIZING AVERAGE {MESOR) AND SEVEN-DAY-CYCLE DOUBLE AMPLITUDE (2A) DURING 16 YEARS OF SELF-MEASURED MORNING HEART RATE OF WRB* as _ O) X E 75 E O 65 ^ 21.0(12.2,29.9), 6.65(511,8.20), 4.33(3.43,5.22), 0.98(0,95,1.00) y '. . I. 9.93(6.75,13.1) y 55 45 35 25 1974/4/29 1963/3/3* 1992/2/29 2001/1/29 2009/12/31 TIME (Calendar Date) * man, 52 years of ago at start; Increment and Interval analyzed: 14 days Figure 6. Different xs approximate the time course of the MESOR (upper curve) and the double circadian amplitude (lower curve) in heart rate of WRB during 35 years. © Halberg. In the (septan) double amplitude of SBP, the trend could be part of a long cycle. For DBP (upper curve of M), Figure 5, a x longer than the ~11-year Horrebow-Schwabe and shorter than the about 21-year Hale cycle predominated, possibly a 16.7-year signature of the Makarov and Sivaraman global cycle (10). For those in the physics community who have never heard of Makarov and Sivaraman, the finding of their x in the biosphere could be taken as evidence for validating this x which may also be found as a peaklet in sunspot numbers. In the 7-day double amplitude of DBP, a para-tridecadal cycle seems possible. The M in DBP showed added xs, some of which could be harmonics of the Hale and Horrebow-Schwabe cycles. In the shorter series of HR, a Hale cycle mimicry characterizes the MESOR, along with its third harmonic, a further possible harmonic of the Horrebow-Schwabe cycle and a yearly component. The double amplitude of the 7-day cycle shows a putative signature of the Horrebow-Schwabe cycle, Figure 6. Figure 7 shows a multitude of xs for BW, possibly related to a multitude of factors. The limits of a para-tridecadal cycle have been redrawn to specify that it suffices if the CI of the x approaches the 30-40-year range, the interpretation of ax of 25.9 years, with CI extending to 28.7 years, should prompt the search for concomitantly congruent environmental xs. Particularly noteworthy, in the M of BW, are a far-transyear of 1.70 years and a 1.04-year near-transyear with a CI that does not overlap the precise yearly x in WRB, who happens to be very sensitive to cold and thus to the seasons. The 7-day double amplitude of BW in turn exhibits a Horrebow-Schwabe cycle mimicry. With circadecadals or cycles that are multiples and submultiples of 10 years, which might be signatures of the physical solar system, extreme caution is indicated by reliance not on point estimates of the x, but only on CIs of xs and the putative global x between the decadal and didecadal one makes 76 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 almost every x with a wide CI fit a solar equivalent so that addition and subtraction approaches become indispensable; until they are available, the description of mimicry does not allow any inference of causal relations among external and internal periodicities. Discussion. The yearly progression of seasons in a mid-continental climate is anticipated to have a profound effect on our lives, and is expressed in some measures of body function, as in the HR MESOR in Figure 6. Before doing any statistical analysis on the question of the importance of the about-yearly rhythm, WRB felt sure from taking many measurements over 30 years that on a cold day, when his body felt chilled, his BP would tend to be higher than otherwise. Despite modern heating/air conditioning systems, when it is cold outside, he often feels cold inside as well. For at least as long as he kept records, moderate to marked winter chilling of his body resulted in Raynaud's phenomenon, spasms of the arterioles PERIODS CHARACTERIZING AVERAGE (MESOR) AND SEVEN-DAY-CYCLE DOUBLE AMPLITUDE (2A) DURING 35 YEARS OF SELF-MEASURED MORNING BODY WEIGHT OF WRB* si* o -n H r 2.8 25,9(23.2,28.7), 13.8(12,7,14.8), 8.39(6.19,6.59), 3.59(3.77,4,00), 2.94(2,85,3.04), 1.97(1.94,2^00), 1,70(1,61,1.74), 1.04(1.02,1.05) y 158 ~ 2009/12/31 1974/4/29 1983/3/30 1992/2/29 2001/1/29 TIME (Calendar Date) * man, 52 years of age at start; Increment and interval analyzed; 14 days Figure 7. Different xs approximate the time course of the MESOR (upper curve) and the double circadian amplitude (lower curve) in body weight of WRB during 35 years. © Halberg. in some or all of his fingers, leading to a dead white appearance lasting from minutes to (rarely) hours after warming up. This never occurred while he took BP readings, but is symptomatic of his autonomic nervous system's sensitivity to cold. This seasonality notwithstanding, transyears can be present, and overall no yearly component was detected in a global analysis of WRB's BW and not even in the 7-day amplitude of his HR. In a MESOR (chronome-adjusted mean)-normotensive younger colleague who started measurements at 20.5 years of age (RBS), the yearly component was most prominent in SBP and DBP In RBS, an about 33-year cycle has been documented (18; cf. 16, 17, 19, 20). In FH (7), another elderly man (also under hypotensive treatment), a circannual component was absent in SBP, a variable characterized only by transyears. 77 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 In WRB's series, the BEL cycle is consistently demonstrated for SBP and DBP. The BEL was originally documented in climate as an alternation of hot, dry and wet cold spans that was said to have driven people to emigrate from Europe to North America, and westward within North America (40-42). It persists in an analysis of temperature data measured since Bruckner's time to that of this writing (20), and is thus pertinent as a background to discussions of climate change. It relates to economics (43) and to military-political affairs (44) as well as to international battles (45) and thus to diseases of society, as our meta-analyses (20, 23) of invaluable data compiled by the scholarship of Alexander Leonidovich Chizhevsky (44) and Raymond Holder Wheeler (45) reveal. It is noteworthy that if the xs of the physical solar system are built into the biosphere, they could be desynchronized from their environmental counterpart. Whether synchronized or not, a subtraction-addition approach is indicated to see whether the physiological spectral component is damped when the environmental counterpart happens to be lost or amplified reappears or increases in amplitude (7). Before generalizing from two elderly cases, WRB and FH (20), and two younger adults at start of monitoring, RBS and YW (46), many more time series will have to be collected, in the footsteps of Santorio (47), who hung a scale from the ceiling of a room in his house, on which he reportedly carried out all his activities including eating, sleeping, work, excretion and sex. His data, including those on his changes of weight, led to the discovery of insensible perspiration, could not be retrieved. RBS's, FH's, YW's and WRB's data in turn allow the demonstration of otherwise "insensible" effects of the cosmos in our physiology. These results can be complemented not only by nonlinear analyses on FH's data (1987-2009) but also by a remove-and-replace approach, as presented elsewhere (7). A major question revolves around selective congruence. Do different physiologic variables in RBS, YW, WRB and FH show congruence with environmental cycles of differing lengths during the same multidecadal spans, and what may putative underlying mechanisms be for this selective assortment (23, 48)? An approach by remove-and-replace, or at least by subtraction and/or addition of intensity, is recommended for all studies on solar-human associations and remains to be done in our data and in those of others whenever possible (49). Acknowledgement and comment All his co-authors thank Dr. William R. Best (WRB), not only because the data analyzed herein are his. We are pleased to clarify at the outset that WRB's motivation, which has now continued for over 3.5 decades, constitutes a model for the public at large, when some voices suggest that one need not measure blood pressure at all and instead could be treating all comers with antihypertensive drugs regularly. We are in the same situation as diabetology was in the middle of the 20th century, when a lonely voice in Iowa advocated a strict control of blood sugar at one extreme, while others in New York disregarded all control of glycemia at the other extreme, and the majority were in the middle of the road, as is the case today once we substitute "Minnesota" for "Iowa" and "pressure" for "glucose". The time of monitoring of vascular variability disorders is also likely to come. The senior author (FH) is further indebted to WRB for his publication of his studies on the response to epinephrine in 1952 (50) wherein he documented a decrease in the count of circulating eosinophil cells in patients who had had their adrenals removed, a finding that torpedoed the epinephrine test of adrenal cortical function. The latter finding was in agreement with studies of the same response to epinephrine (decrease in eosinophil count) in adrenalectomized and gonadectomized mice of both sexes, where ectopic adrenal cortical tissue next to the vertebral column and in the large ligaments or in the scrotal fat had also been removed by FH. FH reported his inability to confirm the epinephrine test in mice to his then department head, the late George W. Thorn, Hersey Professor of Medicine at Harvard. Thorn admired FH's sticking to his guns, but said that all the others could not be wrong. In the case of the epinephrine test, the majority at the 78 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 time was clearly wrong (50). So are all those who fail to recognize Vascular Variability Disorders (VVDs). We need not repeat the maladies of the past, such as the failure to scrub before surgery. Measuring and interpreting chronobiologically blood pressure series may be cumbersome, like scrubbing for antisepsis. Nonetheless, in a computer era self-surveillance could soon be implemented by everyone continuously, whether or not he has a WD and as a feature of universal preventive health care it may allow even the mapping of infradian, e.g., transtridecadal cycles (51) and perhaps some new information thereby concerning the health of individuals and societies (52, 53). Support: GM-13981 (FH) and University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (GC, FH) REFERENCES 1. Halberg F. Chronobiology: methodological problems. Acta med rom 1980; 18: 399-440. 2. Cornelissen G, Halberg F. 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London: SWB; 2011. p. 111. Prof. Franz Halberg, M.D., Dr. h. c. multi Director Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Integrative Biology and Physiology, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 82 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART RATE VARIABILITY GAUGING HEALTH, THE MIND, LOADS AND HUMAN AFFAIRS (ASSESSED BY A SYSTEM FOR A CHRONOBIOLOGICALLY-INTERPRETED ABPM REPLACING THE BLOOD PRESSURE CUFF IN PROVIDERS' OFFICES) Germaine Cornelissen1, Franz Halberg1, Othild Schwartzkopff1, Jarmila Siegelova2, Jiri Dusek3, RB Singh4 1 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA 2 Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic 3 Healthy Medical Center, South Moravia Region, Brno, Czech Republic 4 Halberg Hospital and Research Institute, Centre of Nutrition and Heart Research, Moradabad, U.R,India Support: GM-13981 (FH) and University of Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (GC, FH). Preamble It is an anachronism to do no more than determine, at each physical examination, what the blood pressure (BP) or heart rate (HR) may be at a given moment. We need not ignore what happened inside or outside the physiological range in the past and, in particular, since the person was last seen, when for instance there was a change in medication. BP behavior in any situation encountered in life is a gauge of load (1). Eventually, preventive cardiology, as part of a wider transdisciplinary science and a still broader culture (2), may recognize that monitoring the ECG around the clock and for longer than a day or even a week need not be reserved for patients near or in fibrillation and that a continuous registration of vital signs from womb to tomb has advantages that call for proper tools such as a polychronor planned and developed in part by Siemens in the 1970s (3). Technology that records HR from the ear is already available (4, 5), and in-the-ear unobtrusive devices have been proposed for recording BP and the EEG as well (6). Figure 1 shows elevations in BP while we think hard, drive through a tornado warning, or exercising (7). All of these responses to such activities and any others require a reference standard for deciding whether a value is elevated or within limits. These norms change predictably along the 24-hour scale, as seen in Figure 1, as well as along other, notably much longer as well as shorter scales. Some variability is predictable and assessable, as we map, in addition to the about 24-hour variation (Figure 2, left) and about-yearly rhythms (Figure 2, middle), cis-half-years, about-half-yearly rhythms, near-transyears and far-transyears, as well as cycles with periods of about one to several decades. A systematically changing set of reference values is best obtained for a given person during wellness. This is the most immediate reason for continuous monitoring by everybody, once unobtrusive, affordable instrumentation becomes available. This availability at low cost depends solely on the recognition of the need, since the technology is available, to monitor BP for the purpose of surveillance. The BP monitoring of mice in laboratories, primarily of pharmaceutical companies interested in developing new drugs, can and should be extended for those who care to use these drugs. An FDA-approved automatic monitor of BP on the wrist is already available, albeit at an all-too-high cost (8). Another, no less significant reason for monitoring is that our environment also changes and its dynamics can be assessed quantitatively, as many aspects already are. We advocate that human and other animals' BP and HRbe also monitored for continued surveillance of environmental effects. Both 83 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 the physical and social time structures around us impart their features to our healthy physiological and altered pathological and epidemiological dynamics (9). Chronomes (time structures; from Gk chronos = time and Gk nomos = rule) consist of cycles embedded in and arising from deterministic and other chaos and trends. Some of the trends may be parts of cycles longer than the time series on hand. The cycles are aeolian in space and time, so named after Aeolus, mythical Greek ruler of the winds. They have characteristics that change as a function of time, their amplitude increasing and decreasing, sometimes below the noise level, and the frequency drifting, sometimes to the point of merging with other neighboring signals. They hence require analyses in space and time, i.e., they have to be specified for geo- or cosmo-graphic location in space and analyzed in the longest available time series as a whole (globally) as well as in sections (locally in time). The sections chosen for analysis are best systematically varied in length, preferably by complementary methods or sets of methods, that combine both aims glocally, i.e., GLObally and loCALLY. This can be done on the one hand by varying the parameters of a single approach, e.g., the interval lengths in moving spectrograms (10) or the time-frequency parameters of wavelets (11), or, on the other hand, as a set of multiple methods such as the global extended linear-nonlinear cosinor with gliding spectra and with chronomic serial sections. Preferably, some redundancies not withstanding, all these methods may well be used. All of the cycles tested thus far are transdisciplinary, found in the lithosphere and biosphere, including an anthroposphere. We propose that they can serve for a further step, namely to organize Vernadsky's noosphere into a chronousphere (portmanteaued from Gk chronos = time, Attic Gk nous = mind, and Gk sphairos = sphere or, in our context, also globe) (2). The transdisciplinary cycles constitute an extension of the electromagnetic cycles with congruent, e.g., overlapping CIs (95% confidence intervals) of their periods, which offer themselves as organizing features, constituting a system. Any physical, biological or other variable can be studied in a general as well as specific diagnostic or therapeutic medical context. In the general context, a variable can be informative with respect to many human and environmental affairs (2). Such a broad view is particularly warranted in the case of BP and HR. One of us (FH) first learned about the ranges of variability in the counts of certain blood cells that stain with a pink dye (eosin) (12). Next, he mapped the variability of epileptic seizures and electroencephalograms, and then after solving several puzzles, had the opportunity to be first in documenting the about 24-hour rhythms of RNA and DNA formation (13), at a time when nucleic acid was believed to be THE constant feature of organisms (12). What started with blood cell counts resulted in scientific tools, if not disciplines, as branches of a unified science (2): 1. Chronobiology is the study of time structures in living matter. Time structures in and around us consist of deterministic and other chaos, trends and cycles (14), the former two components contributing to the variability of the latter. In physiology, cycles lead us into the normal range, which is otherwise covered by the curtain of ignorance of homeostasis, Figure 2. Rather than following the "constancy" of the aging Claude Bernard (15), we agree with the younger Bernard's recognition of the "extreme variability of the internal environment" as one of his major discoveries (in response to an inquiry by a journal) (16). Variability, when present, serves for new diagnoses that single spotchecks cannot detect, Figure 3, and renders old diagnoses less unreliable. Abnormal variability in BP and HR is resolved by computer in time series collected automatically in a proposed cyber-healthcare (17), as suggested by others for the 2020s without specifically proposing the replacement of single spotchecks by continuous monitoring (18). This has been implemented for BP and HR in the light of data from the 20th century (19) that recognized a high risk of a stroke occurring within 6 years associated with a circadian overswing, exceeding the risk of a high BP. The goal of determining and treating harbingers of severe cerebro-, cardio-, reno-vascular disease (CVD) has been implemented as a model for elsewhere in two Japanese towns, Urausu and Tosa City, by Prof. Kuniaki Otsuka 84 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 (20-23), beyond the plans of the former mayor of Roseville, Minnesota, Dan Wall (24). Without clinically applied chronobiologic diagnoses, many millions worldwide (25) with Vascular Variability Anomalies (VVAs) (more than those with only high BP, also a VVA) are at a high risk of CVDs, comparable to (and, in particular, in the case of coexistent VVAs, much larger than) the risk of CVD associated with a high BP not complicated by other VVAs (14, 17, 26). The promise of chronobiology lies in the prevention of personal cataclysms such as massive strokes within 6 years (Figures 4A and 4B) that otherwise, as in current practice, remain undetected. 2. Chronomics aligns and studies interactions among time structures in and around us by a remove-and-replace (or at least by an addition-and-subtraction) approach, done by the sun at a certain frequency while recording any amplification or damping of a corresponding biospheric frequency component. Without clinically applied chronomics, the mirroring of environmental, including solar and interplanetary cycles in the human circulation would have remained unknown (9). The promise of chronomics lies in clarifying factors underlying human-made (9, 27) and natural (28) cataclysms, in order to develop countermeasures to disasters such as crime, terrorism or war, or to evade natural disasters like earthquakes, preferably by the study of data collected in chronobiology for personal self-surveillance (17). 3. Chronobioethics. Diseases of nations, such as international battles in the past 2556 years, exhibit periods that are counterparts of cycles in the solar system (27), as noted for military-political affairs by Alexander Leonidovich Chizhevsky (28-33) and Suitbert Ertel (34). The demonstration in BP of about 21-year Hale (35) bipolar cycles can be a starting point for focus on ills of society by focus on individuals for chronobioethics. Just as a micro-organism can multiply to produce a lethal toxin, so can a mentally ill individual, by infecting a population, produce both crime and terror. Starting with focus upon the psycho-physiological mechanisms of cycles underlying diseases of nations, complex relations will have to be resolved, perhaps the major task of applied societal biomedicine, if humanity is to meet the extremist challenges of our time. Vascular Variability Anomalies (VVAs) Transient circadian VVAs can be physiological responses to tasks and encounters in everyday life (1). They are best analyzed glocally, that is, a 24-hour cosine curve is fitted to 7-day or longer BP and HR profiles as a whole (globally) and further to 24-hour or systematically longer sections (locally). Local VVAs on single or a few days are more likely responses to transient loads, Figure 5, than global VVAs that may occur beyond the span of time during which long-term loads persist, Figure 6. Monitoring BP and HR should be accompanied by a diary to detect the association of loads with VVAs, so that the loads yielding strain are identified and activities associated with them are avoided as far as possible. Globally, single or a few days of a VVA (e.g., out of a 7-day record) are often outweighed by acceptable days without VVAs when the record is analyzed as a whole. VVAs become Vascular Variability Disorders (VVDs) when they persist after the cessation of short- and long-term loads in several consecutive glocally analyzed 7-day profiles. When several VVDs coexisted in a first 6-year study on 297 patients, they raised the risk of a severe event such as a stroke in 6 years from less than 5% to up to 100% (17, 19; cf. 25, 26). In this study and others, the numbers of subjects involved compensate to some extent for the individual record's brevity (of 48 hours). Chronobiometry, on a small scale, detected these abnormalities in individuals' records worldwide via a project on The BlOsphere and the COSmos, BIOCOS (corne001(g),umn. edu). The development of affordable unobtrusive instrumentation and a manned international website for education, analyses and research can greatly extend these endeavors on a much broader scale, Figure 7. Whereas adverse events in the first study of severe outcomes such as brain or heart attacks or kidney disease were assessed (17, 19), in a second study, around-the-clock BP and HR profiles were 85 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 complemented by an assessment of the left ventricular mass index (LVMI) as a surrogate outcome measure (26). In the second study, one-fourth (24.6%) of 1,177 untreated, presumably normotensive subjects had MESOR-hypertension (MH), an elevation above gender- and age-matched peer limits of the MESOR (M, Midline-Estimating Statistic Of Rhythm, usually more accurate and more precise than the arithmetic mean), obtained by curve-fitting with the cosinor, also yielding other characteristics that can be deviant. Among the 289 subjects diagnosed with MH on the basis of 24-hour records, 137 (47.4%) had one or more VVAs. The current screening in health care fails to detect VVDs other than hypertension. Some VVDs can occur in the absence of high BP, in very few patients with excessive pulse pressure (EPP), in more patients with a circadian overswing (CHAT, short for Orcadian Hyper-Amplitude-Tension), in yet more with odd circadian timing (ecphasia), and in 87 patients with a deficient HR variability (DHRV), that is for a total of 182 subjects, representing 15.5% of the study population (which could amount to 10.5 million people in the US population). In a third study, with survival as outcome, summarized 28 and 42 years after the examination (36), those with a circadian overswing (CHAT) were all dead when some of those without this VVD were alive (P=0.011), Figure 8. Consensus of Brno On the basis of these three and other investigations, a consensus was guided by two preeminent cardiac physiologists, both university department heads, one (Thomas Kenner) also a president of the University of Graz (Austria), the other (the late Bohumil Fiser) a Czech minister of health and WHO board member. It documents the great limitations to any inference concerning the individual of a chronobiologically-uninterpreted record from ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) covering only 24 hours. The consensus advocates for everybody in health, for load assessment, continuous, preferably lifetime BP and HR monitoring by replicated chronobiologically-interpreted (C)-ABPM (17). Once the diagnosis of a VVA is made, a change in lifestyle is indicated. In the case of a VVD, non-drug or drug treatment is recommended, again with continued monitoring. Sometime, in persons receiving hypotensive medication, a change in medication can eliminate the VVA. Hence, in the case of all hypotensive drug use, systematic change in treatment kind and timing for its optimization is recommended first, and thereafter, C-ABPM is continued for surveillance of treatment effects. The consensus concluded that the BP cuff in the provider's office or in the care recipient's home is to be replaced by a system of chronobiologic monitoring, preferably via a cell-phone, for assessment of strain and of CVD antecedents, for the objective optimization of drug or other treatment, and thereafter for treatment surveillance. The aim of all anti-hypertensive treatment is to return any and all altered BP or HR characteristic, as soon as detected, into the acceptable range. The consensus implements the desire of pioneers In 1904, Theodore C. Janeway (37), an opinion leader at Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Maryland, USA), concluded that "... it is essential that a record of the pressure be made at frequent intervals at some time previous [presumably to an examination], to establish the normal level and the extent of the periodic variations [note plural]. When this is done, it may be possible to demonstrate changes of small extent, which, lacking this standard for comparison, would be considered within the limits of normal variation". Indeed, before Janeway, Zadek (38, 39) had data allowing the cosinor validation of about 3.5- and 7-day as well as daily variation (40). The late Frederic C. Bartter (41) (of Bartter syndrome fame; director first of the Hypertension-Endocrine Branch of the [US] National Institutes of Health [NIH] and later of the NIH Clinical Center) wrote regarding his patient whose BP was diagnosed differently by two physicians who saw him at different times of day: "By conventional standards, this patient is clearly normotensive every morning [one of the earlier diagnoses]. Yet the 86 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 blood pressure determined each day at 6 in the afternoon provides especially convincing evidence that this patient is a hypertensive. [The other diagnosis by the care provider who saw this patient in the morning; material in ( ) is our addition.]... My [Bartter's] plea today is that information contained in such curves [cosinor fits] become a routine minimal amount of information accepted for the description of a patient's blood pressure. The analysis of this information by cosinor should become a routine. It is essential that enough information be collected to allow objective characterization of a periodic phenomenon, to wit, an estimate of M [the time structure or chronome-adjusted mean, or MESOR] ... an estimate of [the amplitude] A itself, and finally an estimate of acrophase, § [a measure of timing]. In this way, a patient can be compared with himself at another time, or under another treatment, and the patient can be compared with a normal or with another patient." These visionary statements will be more readily implemented with modern instrumentation for data collection and chronobiologic analysis, once limitations of the status quo are clarified. Status quo Today's practice, often with casual single BP measurements by a trained professional at yearly or even longer intervals, determines whether the pressure is elevated above arbitrary fixed limits at the given moment. This is done when small devices for BP telemetry can be implanted for a lifetime in small laboratory animals like mice (to develop new drugs) or for other research purposes and routinely in cars' tires as a safety measure. There is indeed an FDA-approved wristwatch-size automatic BP recorder to remove undue obtrusiveness, albeit as yet costly (8). Implicit to the status quo are the tacit beliefs that BP is constant, that any variability in BP stems solely from measurement error, activity or emotions, and that the latter and sleep- and wakefulness-associated changes fully account for the extensive literature reporting on prominent about 24-hour or circadian rhythms (42; cf. 43). There are, however, gender differences, changes as a function of age and, what is novel, a broad spectrum of partly built-in infradian rhythms (with periods longer than 28 hours) up to decades-long cycles (9) characterizing circadian characteristics such as the MESOR (M), double amplitude (2A, a measure of predictable extent of change within a cycle), and acrophase (§, a measure of timing of overall all values recurring in each cycle). All these parameters have an uncertainty, usually gauged by the 95% confidence interval (CI). Currently, in a diagnostically important range of pressures, the acceptability of a BP measurement depends on whether the individual is seen by the provider at one or another clock-hour, Figure 9 (44), as was the case in a patient seen by one physician in the morning, who diagnosed him as normotensive, while another physician, who saw him later in the day, diagnosed him as hypertensive (41). He was hospitalized at the US National Institutes of Health, and his BP fluctuation confirmed the wide within-day fluctuation. When, in current practice, ABPM is recommended, it is limited to 24 or to 48 hours and remains uninterpreted chronobiologically. When ABPM is done for 30 days, one can find, in the case of a neurosurgery resident, on different days at the same clock-hour and on the same day of the week, measurements compatible with hypertension, normotension and hypotension, Figure 10. Currently, data collected around the clock are examined in terms of 24-hour, daytime and nighttime means and standard deviations (SD), sometimes complemented by an estimate of the day-night ratio (DNR) (45). The DNR, its current general use notwithstanding, is documented as too crude an approximation of the circadian variation (19, 26). It can fail (46) or even mislead (47; cf. 48) when the alternative chronobiologic analysis works, Figure 11. Against this background, improvements are desirable (17). Arbitrary fixed limits or "targets" like 120 mmHg in systolic "pre-hypertension" or 140 mmHg in systolic "hypertension" need to be replaced with limits of circadian characteristics derived from curve-fitting and stacking, the latter time-specified as prediction intervals and qualified by gender, age and when possible by geographic/ethnic setting. Chronobiologically- and chronomically-interpreted 87 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ABPM (C-ABPM) on subjects in clinical health served to derive time-specified reference limits along the 24-hour scale, separately for each gender in different age groups, computed as 90% prediction limits expected to cover, on the average, 90% of the population of Caucasians in Europe and North America (49, 50). These reference standards served thus far worldwide until geographic and ethnic differences are further investigated. The least squares fit by cosinor of a 2-component model, consisting of cosine curves with periods of 24 and 12 hours served to adequately approximate the circadian waveform of BP and HR in most people. The period is not listed in the usual sphygmochron (Figure 12), which is a summary of a C-ABPM, when the CI of the circadian period covers 24 hours. (When the period's CI does not cover 24 hours, a glocal analysis of all detected circadian components is indicated.) Estimates are obtained for the MESOR (usually more accurate and more precise that the arithmetic mean), and for the double amplitude (2A) and acrophase (§) of each component (Figure 12, left). Gender- and age-specified reference values for M, 2A(24h) and cf)(24h) are also derived as 90% prediction limits, eventually to be improved by restriction to a database needed to retain only time series on long-lived disease-free individuals, in order to have reference values to detect VVAs. One of the VVAs is thus far hardly explored, but includes, in our experience, a first case of (a lady with) circadian multifrequentia. Figure 13 shows the time course of the dominant period among several circadian components in addition to a 24.0-hour-synchronized component, the time course of the multiple circadians being shown for BP and HR in Figure 14. By assessing circadian characteristics and by relying on reference values that account for the prominent circadian variation as well as for gender and age differences, new questions can be asked that are more refined than just asking whether or not a BP value is elevated or too low. Deviations from circadian norms can affect the MESOR, among other rhythm characteristics. MESOR-hypertension, MH, is diagnosed when M is above the upper 95% limit of gender- and age-matched peers; MESOR-hypotension, Mh, when it is below the lower 5% limit. By corresponding criteria, an odd timing (circadian ecphasia) or odd period (ec- or dysfrequentia) can be diagnosed, Figure 3. An elevation of the 2A(24h) above the upper 95% prediction limit of peers has been associated in a first study in Japanese subjects with an increase in cardiovascular disease risk larger than that of a high BP (MH), Figure 15-IIA,B (17, 19), even among MESOR-normotensive subjects, Figure 15 II-C (left column). This condition has been called CHAT (Circadian Hyper-Amplitude-Tension) and may sometimes be amenable to treatment, notably when it is iatrogenic, by a change in treatment timing (51). An odd timing of the circadian rhythm of BP but not of HR (circadian BP ecphasia), found, e.g., in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, is also associated with a large increase in CVD risk. It has been related to the presence of autonomic system dysfunction (7,17). MH, CHAT, BP ecphasia and ecfrequentia, i.e., an altered circadian period, are further examples of VVAs. Circadian ecfrequentia may occur physiologically when the dominant period is desynchronized from 24.0 hours, with a 95% CI not covering 24.0 hours in a subject on a self-selected odd sleep-wake schedule (52) (when multiple circadian periods may be found in sleep-wakefulness), or in recurrent adynamic depression when multiple periods may be found both in the circulation and in the endocrines (53), or when the circadian rhythm may be lost (circadian arrhythmia insofar as the assumption of a zero circadian amplitude cannot be rejected). VVAs also include an excessive pulse pressure (above 60 mmHg) and a deficient HR variability (denned as HR-SD < 7.5 beats/min), all in a 24-hour/7-day record replicated in the absence of a load. These VVAs have been shown to be largely independent and additive. When two or more VVAs coexist in replicated 24-hour/7-day records to form a Vascular Variability Syndrome (VVS), the CVD risk is increased, Figures 4A and 4B (7, 17), as demonstrated in several outcome studies. This paper is a plea to those who possess outcome studies with ABPM limited to one or a few days to compare 88 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 the relative merits of their approach with that here advocated themselves and/or to send their data to the BIOCOS project (corneOO 1 @,umn.edu) for such a comparison. Measuring BP variability and strain in health By keeping detailed diaries, it is possible to associate specific changes in measures of circadian BP and HR variability, including the M, with external events resulting in conflict or grief, Figure 16A (54), anger, worry, exercise and alcohol consumption, to cite just a few examples, or with associations of VVAs with visitors, parties, holidays and other events, sometimes but not always loads, Figures 1, 5 and 6 (1). Giving a party was associated in one subject with a VVA, while attending a party by the same subject had no such effect (while other circumstances, such as ethanol consumption, were similar; 1). One important application in this context is to use ABPM as a tool to assess strain and factors underlying its occurrence so as to determine lifestyle modifications that may help control VVAs after the cessation of loads, Figure 6 (1). It cannot be overemphasized that a physiological VVA or the putative pathology of a VVD can occur in the normal range, Figure 16B (1). Screening for Vascular Variability Disorders (VVDs) leads to a refined diagnosis It has been recommended that ABPM be performed for a minimum of 7 days at the outset (17), to be complemented by another week-long profile whenever abnormality is detected and to rely on continued surveillance once abnormality is detected, in view of the day-to-day, week-to-week and even longer variability in BP and HR associated with a sometime selectively assorted set of infradian rhythms. Around-the-clock monitoring for a lifetime is the method of choice for everybody for strain assessment. The term strain is used to denote the response to loads ("stressors", or rather "stress"), gauged by endpoints of circadian and other rhythms, rather than relying on spotchecks ignoring such endpoints. This assessment is particularly relevant for patients in need of treatment for the optimization of therapy by timing at the outset (17, 55-59), for surveillance of continued treatment efficacy and for earliest detection and correction of any undesired iatrogenic effect. Timely institution of timed treatment targeted to the individual patient's diagnosis Optimizing the timing of treatment in view of the chronodiagnosis of individual patients has been called chronotheranostics (60). Not all anti-hypertensive agents can reduce an excessive circadian amplitude of BP (17, 61). The same dose of the same drug administered to the same patient for month-long spans (each monitored for the last week) can exacerbate systolic CHAT and induce diastolic CHAT when it is given at one circadian stage (in relation to the time of awakening) but eliminates CHAT when it is given at another circadian stage (51, 62). A different timing of the administration of a given medication to each individual in a group according to the time of high BP excess in a previously monitored record has been shown to be associated with a greater efficacy, to have fewer side effects and to require a lesser dose, thus being also less costly, as compared to a group on traditional scheduling three times a day or at some clock-time without personalized checking of the time and/or kind of abnormality (58, 59; cf. 56). Cost-effectiveness of continued surveillance by ABPM The modest, already documented technological change to an automatic monitor once it becomes affordable makes continued ABPM available to the lay public on a very broad scale. Conditions involving billions of people, now unrecognized by both patients and care providers, could be detected, Figures 4A and 4B (17, 25), thereby allowing a shift from the emphasis on the treatment of overt disease to a truly primary prevention prompted by the diagnosis of pre-hypertension (14, 17), prediabetes (46, 63) and a pre-metabolic syndrome (all associated with the presence of VVAs or VVDs) 89 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 before the onset of target organ damage (14, 17), thereby reducing the incidence of morbid events such as strokes, heart attacks, kidney disease and retinopathy. Website The building of a dedicated manned website for the analysis of weeklong and preferably lifelong profiles of BP and HR would help reduce cost since health professionals would only be called upon once there is a need for intervention, the surveillance being part of self-help taught in schools (17). The cost of analyses would also be reduced, the data management being fully automated, including the construction of data archives serving for the longitudinal follow-up of individual subjects. These databases could be further mined for the identification of new VVDs and for refining the reference values. Basic science: physiological responses to the environment near and far may become pathology The databases collected for self-help in health care could also be mined for answering a host of novel questions related to the influence of the environment on human physiology and psychology. Apart from the circadian rhythm, BP and HR are characterized by many other cycles, some related to light and temperature such as about-yearly rhythms and others sharing the frequencies of the solar wind and/or geomagnetic activity, Figure 17 (64, 65). The mapping of about 5-month cycles (64, 66), of transyears with periods longer than 1.0 but shorter than 1.9 years (67) as well as the about 10.5-year Horrebow-Schwabe cycle, the about 21-year Hale cycle, the about 33-year Briickner-Egeson-Lockyer (BEL) (68) and the about 50-year Kondratieff cycle has already started in several longitudinal records spanning decades (69). Some lessons concerning the development of MESOR-hypertension have already been learned that may see practical applications (70). Magnetic storms have been associated with a decreased HR variability (71, 72), a risk factor for coronary artery disease. Shielding susceptible patients or screening the population as a whole for WAs and in particular for a deficient HRV in candidates for space travel come to mind. Systolic BP seems to be an infradian marker of solar wind speed (67). The human body is a readily available physiological laboratory and BP and HR are biomarkers that can unveil important physiological responses to seemingly benign life events, revealing strain, CVD risk increase, pre-disease and disease. Thereby a new window on life in the cosmos is found. Organisms are open systems with the environment, subject to photic as well as non-photic, the latter rather unstationary (aeolian) solar influences, which may be in the normal range. Hence, they are neglected in current spotcheck- (pseudo-) evidence-based health care. Chronobiology and chronomics are more complex yet inexpensive and cost-effective. A system for 7-days of monitoring and analysis for evading a stroke and perhaps a social upheaval or natural disaster, i.e., an earthquake, is worth considering as a good trade (17). REFERENCES 1. Halberg F, Cornelissen F, Halberg Francine, Kessler T, Otsuka K. Measuring mental strain by duration of blood pressure overswing (CHAT): case report. 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Hotta N, Otsuka K, Murakami S, Yamanaka G, Kubo Y, Matsuoka O, Yamanaka T, Shinagawa M, Nunoda S, Nishimura Y, Shibata K, Saitoh H, Nishinaga M, Ishine M, Wada T, Okumiya K, Matsubayashi K, Yano S, Ichihara K, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Fractal analysis of heart rate variability and mortality in elderly community-dwelling people — Longitudinal Investigation for the Longevity and Aging in Hokkaido County (LILAC) study. Biomed & Pharmacother 2005; 59 (Suppl 1): S45-S48. 22. Murakami S, Otsuka K, Yamanaka G, Kubo Y, Matsuoka O, Yamanaka T, Shinagawa M, Nunoda S, Ohkawa S, Wada T, Matsubayashi K, Yano S, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Positive impact of social intervention on disturbed neurobehavioral function in an elderly community-dwelling population: Longitudinal Investigation for Longevity and Aging in Hokkaido County (LILAC). Biomed & Pharmacother 2004; 58 (Suppl 1): S45-S47. 23. Murakami S, Otsuka K, Hotta N, Yamanaka G, Kubo Y, Matsuoka O, Yamanaka T, Shinagawa M, Nunoda S, Nishimura Y, Shibata K, Takasugi E, Nishinaga M, Ishine M, Wada T, Okumiya K, Matsubayashi K, Yano S, Ichihara K, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Common carotid intima-media thickness is predictive of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in elderly community-dwelling people: Longitudinal Investigation for the Longevity and Aging in Hokkaido County (LILAC) study. Biomed & Pharmacother 2005; 59 (Suppl 1): S49-S53. 24. Otsuka K, Cornelissen G, Schwartzkopff O, Bakken EE, Halberg F, Burioka N, Katinas GS, Kane R, Regal PJ, Schaffer E, Sonkowsky R, Patterson R, Engebretson M, Brockway B, Wang ZR, Delmore P, Halpin C, Sarkozy S, Wall D, Halberg J. Clinical chronobiology and chronome-geriatrics: At variance with recommendations of subsequent guidelines, yet focusing indeed on pre-hypertension in the physiological range. Biomed & Pharmacother 2003; 57 (Suppl 1): 164s-198s. 25. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Wilson D, Singh RB, De Meester F, Watanabe Y, Otsuka K, Khalilov E. Chronobiology and chronomics: detecting and applying the cycles of nature. Biologist 2009; 56 (4): 209-214. 26. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Otsuka K, Singh RB, Chen CH. Chronobiology predicts actual and proxy outcomes when dipping fails. Hypertension 2007; 49: 237-239. doi: 10.1161/01. HYP.0000250392.51418.64 27. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Halberg Francine, Grambsch P, Schwartzkopff O. Meta-analytic history of congruent cycles in space weather, the human mind and other affairs. World Forum „Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 111. 28. Watanabe Y, Halberg F, Otsuka K, Cornelissen G. Physiological changes in relation to the 2011 East Japan earthquake. World Forum „Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 113-114. 29. Chizhevsky AL. Kosmische Einflüsse, die die Entstehung von Massenpsychosen begünstigen. Deutsch-Russische Medizinische Zeitschrift 1928; 4: 86-116. 30. Chizhevsky AL. Action de l'ionisation de l'atmosphere et de l'ionisation artificielle de l'air sur les organismes sains et les organismes malades. In: Piery M. (Ed.) Traite de Climatologie: Biologique etMedicale. Tome premier. Paris: Masson et Cie; 1934. p. 662-673. 92 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 31. Chizhevsky AL. Cosmobiologie et Rythme du Milieu Exterieur. Verhandlungen, Zweiten Konferenz der Internationalen Gesellschaft für Biologische Rhythmusforschung, am 25. und 26. August 1939, Utrecht, Holland, Holmgren Hj. (Ed.). Acta med scand 1940; 108(Suppl.): 211-226. 32. Chizhevsky AL (Fedynsky VV, Ed). The Earth in the Universe. Translated from Russian [and edited by IRST staff]. NASA TT F-345. Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations [available from US Dept of Commerce, Clearinghouse for Federal Scientific and Technical Information, Springfield, Virginia]; 1968. 280 pp. 33. Chizhevsky [Tchijevsky] AL (de Smitt VP, trans and condensed). Physical factors of the historical process. Cycles 1971; 22: 11-27. http://www.cyclesresearchinstitute.org/chizhevsky/ chizhevskyl.pdf 34. Ertel S. Space weather and revolutions: Chizhevsky's heliobiological claim scrutinized. Studia Psychologica 1996; 39: 3-22. 35. Hale GE. Sun-spots as magnets and the periodic reversal of their polarity. Nature 1924; 113: 105-112. 36. Müller-Bohn T, Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Halhuber M, Delea CS. Blood pressure variability gauged by circadian overswing (CHAT) and lifespan. Time Series (not spotcheck) Evidence-Based Holistic Approach to Health, 1st International Workshop of the TsimTsoum Institute, Krakow, Poland, June 3, 2010, p. 22-23. 37. Janeway TC. The clinical study of blood pressure. New York: D. Appleton & Co.; 1904. 300 pp. 38. Zadek I. Die Messung des Blutdrucks am Menschen mittelst des Basch'chen Apparates. Berlin, med. F., Diss., 25. Nov 1880. Berlin: Schumacher; 1880. 48 pp. 39. Zadek I. Die Messung des Blutdrucks am Menschen mittelst des Basch'chen Apparates. Z klin Med 1881; 2: 509-551. 40. Halberg F, Schwartzkopff O, Cornelissen G. Circadiane-infradiane Blutdruckmessung als Voraussetzung für eine möglichst fehlerfreie Hypertonie-Behandlung. Leibniz-Online Nr. 5, 2009 (http://www. 1 eibniz-sozietaet.de/journal). 17 pp. 41. Bartter FC. Periodicity and medicine. In: SchevingLE, Halberg F,Pauly JE. (Eds.)Chronobiology. Tokyo: Igaku Shoin Ltd.; 1974. p. 6-13. 42. Pickering TG, Shimbo D, Haas D. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. N Engl J Med 2006; 354:2368-2374. 43. Cornelissen G, Chen CH, Halberg F. Predictive value of blood pressure variability: merits of circadian parameters versus dipping patterns. N Engl J Med 2006 [Aug 14]; 355; 8: 850. [Letter in response to Pickering TG, Shimbo D, Haas D. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. N Engl J Med 2006; 354: 2368-2374. Reply by Pickering TG, Shimbo D, Haas D. N Engl J Med 2006 [Aug 14]; 355; 8: 850-851.] 44. Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Impeachment of casual blood pressure measurements and the fixed limits for their interpretation and chronobiologic recommendations. Ann NY Acad Sei 1996; 783: 24-46. 45. VerdecchiaP, Porcellati C, Schillaci G, Borgioni C, Ciucci A, Battisteiii M, Guerrieri M, Gatteschi C, Zampi I, Santucci A, Santucci C, Reboldi G. Ambulatory blood pressure: an independent predictor of prognosis in essential hypertension. Hypertension 1994; 24: 793-801. 46. Gupta AK, Greenway FL, Cornelissen G, Pan W, Halberg F. Prediabetes is associated with abnormal circadian blood pressure variability. J Human Hypertension 2008; 22: 627-633. doi:10:1038/jhh.2008.32 47. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Beaty L, Kumagai Y, Halberg E, Halberg J, Lee J, Schwartzkopff O, Otsuka K. Cugini's syndrome in statu nascendi: Oratio contra morem prevalentem et pro chronobiologica rati one ad pressione sanguinis curandam. La Clinica Terapeutica 2009; 160 (2): el3-e24. 93 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 48. Cugini P, Cruciani F, Turri M, Regine F, Gherardi F, Petrangeli CM, Gabrieli CB. 'Minimal-change hypertensive retinopathy' and 'arterial pre-hypertension', illustrated via ambulatory blood-pressure monitoring in putatively normotensive subjects. International Ophthalmology 1998; 22(3): 145-149. 49. Hillman DC, Cornelissen G, Scarpelli PT, Otsuka K, Tamura K, Delmore P, Bakken E, Shinoda M, Halberg F, International Womb-to-Tomb Chronome Initiative Group. Chronome maps of blood pressure and heart rate. University of Minnesota/Medtronic Chronobiology Seminar Series, #2, December 1991, 3 pp. of text, 38 figures. 50. Cornelissen G, Haus E, Halberg F. Chronobiologic blood pressure assessment from womb to tomb. In: Touitou Y, Haus E. (Eds.) Biological Rhythms in Clinical and Laboratory Medicine. Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 1992. p. 428-452. 51. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Tvildiani L, Gigolashvili M, Janashia K, Toba T, Revilla M, Regal P, Sothern RB, Wendt HW, Wang ZR, Zeman M, Jozsa R, Singh RB, Mitsutake G, Chibisov SM, Lee J, Holley D, Holte JE, Sonkowsky RP, Schwartzkopff O, Delmore P, Otsuka K, Bakken EE, Czaplicki J, International BIOCOS Group. Chronobiology's progress: Part II, chronomics for an immediately applicable biomedicine. J Appl Biomed 2006; 4: 73-86. http:// www.zsf.j cu.cz/vyzkum/j ab/4_2/halberg2.pdf 52. Costella J, Halberg F, Hillman D, Mikulecky M, Cornelissen G. Multiple circadian periods characterize sleep-wakefulness on a clinically healthy man on a self-selected living routine. World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 125. 53. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Ilyia E, Cegielski N, Hillman D, McCraty R, Strestik J, Finley J, Thomas F, Kino T, Sanchez de la Peria S, Chrousos GP, DeMeester F, Singh RB, Mikulecky M. Half-yearly recurrent adynamic loss of 24-hour synchronization. Int J Geronto-Geriatrics 2010; 13 (2): 35-62. 54. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Otsuka K, Katinas GS, Schwartzkopff O, Halpin C, Mikulecky M, Revilla M, Siegelova J, Homolka P, Dusek J, Fiser B, Singh RB. Chronomics detects altered vascular variabilities constituting risks greater than hypertension: with an illustrative case report. In: Mitro P, Pella D, Rybar R, Valocik G. (Eds.) Proceedings, 2nd Congress on Cardiovascular Diseases, Kosice, Slovakia, 25-27 April 2002. Bologna: Monduzzi Editore; 2002. p. 223-258. 55. Güllner HG, Bartter FC, Halberg F. Timing antihypertensive medication. The Lancet, September 8, 1979: 527. 56. Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Introduction to Chronobiology. Medtronic Chronobiology Seminar #7, April 1994, 52 pp. (Library of Congress Catalog Card #94-060580; http://www.msi.umn. edu/~halberg/) 57. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Hawkins D, Otsuka K, Henke W. Individual assessment of antihypertensive response by self-starting cumulative sums. J Medical Engineering & Technology 1997; 21: 111-120. 58. Zaslavskaya RM. Chronodiagnosis and chronotherapy of cardiovascular diseases. 2nd ed. Translation into English from Russian. Moscow: Medicina, 1993, 397 pp. 59. Cornelissen G, Zaslavskaya RM, Kumagai Y, Romanov Y, Halberg F. Chronopharmacologic issues in space. J Clin Pharmacol 1994; 34: 543-551. 60. Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Chapter 11: Treatment with open eyes: markers-guided chronotheranostics. In: Youan BC. (Ed.) Chronopharmaceutics: Science and Technology for Biological Rhythm-Guided Therapy and Prevention of Diseases. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley; 2009. p. 257-323. 94 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 61. Tamura K, Kohno I, Saito Yuzo, Wakasugi K, Achiwa S, Imanishi Y, Cugini P, Halberg F. Antihypertensive individualized therapeutic strategy. Difesa Sociale 1991; 6: 109-124. 62. Watanabe Y, Cornelissen G, HalbergF, Beaty L, Siegelova J, OtsukaK, BakkenEE. Harm vs. benefit from losartan with hydrochlorothiazide at different circadian times in MESOR-hypertension or CHAT. In: Halberg F, Kenner T, Fiser B, Siegelova J. (Eds.) Proceedings, Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, Brno, Czech Republic, October 4-7, 2008. p. 149-167. http://web.fnusa.cz/files/ kfdr2008/sbornik_2008.pdf 63. Sanchez de la Pena S, Gonzalez C, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR) and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) chronobiology. Int J Cardiol 2004; 97 (Suppl 2): S14. 64. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Grambsch P, McCraty R, Beaty L, Siegelova J, Homolka P, Hillman DC, Finley J, Thomas F, Kino T, Revilla M, Schwartzkopff O. Personalized chronobiologic cybercare; other chronomics' progress by transdisciplinary cycles' congruences: Season's Appreciations 2009. JApplBiomed2011; 9: 1-34. DOI 10.2478M0136-009-0022-8. 65. Cornelissen G, Grambsch P, Sothern RB, Katinas G, Otsuka K, Halberg F. Congruent biospheric and solar-terrestrial cycles. J Appl Biomed 2011; 9: 63-102. DOI 10.2478M0136-009-0023-7. 66. Cornelissen G, Tarquini R, Perfetto F, Otsuka K, Gigolashvili M, Halberg F. Investigation of solar about 5-month cycle in human circulating melatonin: signature of weather in extraterrestrial space? Sun and Geosphere 2009; 4(2): 55-59. 67. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Tvildiani L, Gigolashvili M, Janashia K, Toba T, Revilla M, Regal P, Sothern RB, Wendt HW, Wang ZR, Zeman M, Jozsa R, Singh RB, Mitsutake G, Chibisov SM, Lee J, Holley D, Holte JE, Sonkowsky RP, Schwartzkopff O, Delmore P, Otsuka K, Bakken EE, Czaplicki J, International BIOCOS Group. Chronobiology's progress: season's appreciations 2004-2005. Part I. Time-, frequency-, phase-, variable-, individual-, age- and site-specific chronomics. J Appl Biomed 2006; 4: 1-38. http://www.zsfjcu.cz/vyzkum/jab/4_l/ halberg.pdf 68. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Sothern RB, Czaplicki J, Schwartzkopff O. Thirty-five-year climatic cycle in heliogeophysics, psychophysiology, military politics, and economics. Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics 2010; 46 (7): 844-864. 69. Sothern RB, Hillman D, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Infradian cycles gauge aging of the human circulation and respiration around the clock for over four decades. World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 118-119. 70. Watanabe Y, Cornelissen G, Hillman D, Otsuka K, Halberg F. Transition from Sunday-only-MESOR-normotension (weekday-only MESOR-hypertension) to Sunday-inclusive-MESOR-hypertension. World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 122-123. 71. Otsuka K, Cornelissen G, Weydahl A, Holmeslet B, Hansen TL, Shinagawa M, Kubo Y, Nishimura Y, Omori K, Yano S, Halberg F. Geomagnetic disturbance associated with decrease in heart rate variability in a subarctic area. Biomed & Pharmacother 2001; 55 (Suppl 1): 51s-56s. 72. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Breus T, Syutkina EV, Baevsky R, Weydahl A, Watanabe Y, Otsuka K, Siegelova J, Fiser B, Bakken EE. Non-photic solar associations of heart rate variability and myocardial infarction. J Atmos Solar-Terr Phys 2002; 64: 707-720. 95 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 A 1,1- - i I .1, ■ -.1 . iři -." With 1 3k* i r.' b'tud pTiuura :n* drrt* pO 1 stum titling Tnm ů*tÉ tMH ůi h*tm>y p**H: 1/ t*h<4tfi I Is ■ i ;l irj ■ - ■ ■ ■ - ■ Figure 1. Short-term responses as blood pressure elevations in association with different activities, as in this figure, can be assessed in the light of time-varying limits (chronodesms) and can be complemented by reference to parameters of a broad spectrum of infradian as well as circadian rhythms, including CHAT. © Halberg. FROM HOMEOSTASIS Ta i •— TO CLOCKS n The wrakd W3\ m. mrt twin iTucture AMD CHRDMOMES Man I ** Cumin of hpnor^mcB ovw Figure 2. A curtain of ignorance, drawn by the concept of homeostasis over normal variability (left), is only partly lifted by biological clocks and calendars and awaits further exploration of nonphotic spectral components originating in the cosmos. The same data serve for the prevention of individuals' life-threatening events and for an understanding of societal illnesses. © Halberg. 96 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Six Vascular Variability Anomalies (WAs) or Disorders (VVDs) (VVDs if present in several repealed wee kiting pni files) * I. MESOR-Hypertension ME SDR, M -11/- 340 H4P IJH 1?» KM HH «» due odd 11» 'in nai n» II. CHAT (Circadian Hyper-Amplitude-Tension) >>U4j I "*fc>-40ty pflHf mi w^Ly' Amplitude, A m :o h m id IIL Ecphasia IV, Ecfrequentia Acrophase. + n^4"l^f ^4Cn ^^i^E If V, Excessive Pulee Pressure VI. Deficient Heart Rate Variability M liMIMrm'W_J km HH xa j-m Kii Timo (clock hours} * Validated by chrmufaidlq^ic analysis nf zinund-lhc-c!ock 7-dfly/2.fl-hfiLcr records ol measurements at 1-hour or shorter intervals, interpreted in the light of time-specified reference standards, qualified by juender and age ** befrequenria short for frequency (f) alteration (eg., dcsyndnotiiiabari} that can be Dysuequcrrlia when associated with symptonK and/or persisting in repeated consecutive 7-day records Figure 3. Abstract definitions of VVAs: I. MESOR-hypertension; II. CHAT; III. Ecphasia; IV. Ecfrequentia; V. excessive pulse pressure; and VI. Deficient HR variability. These VVAs are diagnosed when the subject's values exceed the upper 95% prediction limit of healthy peers matched by gender and age (I-IV), when the pulse pressure is above 60 mmHg (V), and/or when the standard deviation of HR is below 7.5 beats/min (VI). © Halberg. 91 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Ineidende of a Given Vascular Variability Disorder (WO) Alone or in Combination with Other VVDs in a Clinic Population1 Mesor-HyperteriSion (MH) Circadlan Hyper-Amplitude Tension (CHAT) Eiicesive Pulse Pressure (EPP) Deficient Head Rate Variability iDHRV) * 297 Pa I tents in Toho, Japan, including 176 patients with treated MESOR-Hypertension Figure 4. A. Figure 4. The incidence of VVAs was assessed in a clinic population of 297 patients. BP and HR of each subj ect were monitored around the clock for two days at 15-minute intervals at the start of study. Each record was analyzed chronobiologically and results interpreted in the light of time-specified reference limits qualified by gender and age. On this basis, MESOR-hypertension (MH, diagnosed in 176 patients), excessive pulse pressure (EPP), CHAT, and a deficient heart rate variability (DHRV) were identified and their incidence related to outcomes (cerebral ischemic attack, coronary artery disease, nephropathy, and/or retinopathy). Outcomes, absent at the start of study in these non-diabetic patients, were checked every six months for six years, to estimate the relative risk associated with each VVA alone (primary diagnosis, PD) or in combination with 1, 2, or 3 additional VVAs. Earlier work showed that CHAT was associated with a risk of cerebral ischemic event and of nephropathy higher than MH, and that the risks of CHAT, EPP, and DHRV were mostly independent and additive. It thus seemed important to determine the incidence of each VVA, present alone or in combination with one or more additional VVAs. The 176 patients with MH were broken down into 103 (34.7% of the population of 297 patients) with uncomplicated MH, 55 (18.5%) with MH complicated by one additional VVA, 15 (5.1%) and 3 (1.0%) with MH complicated by two or three additional VVAs. In the last group, all three patients had a morbid outcome within six years of the BP monitoring. Ambulatory BP monitoring over only 48 hours, used for diagnosis, is much better than a diagnosis based on casual clinic measurements, yet its results apply only to groups. With this qualification, of the 176 patients with MH, 73 (42.2%) had additional VVAs that further increase their vascular disease risk, and that are not considered in the treatment plan of these patients since current practice does not assess these VVAs. This proportion may be smaller when VVAs are diagnosed on the basis of a 7-day record (available for CHAT). Results related to EPP (bottom left), CHAT (upper right), and DHRV 98 66 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 (bottom right) illustrate that these conditions can be present in the absence of MH in as many as 12 (4.0%) of the 297 subjects. Since they do not have MH, it is unlikely that these subjects would be treated from a conventional viewpoint, even though their vascular disease risk can be as high as or even higher than MH. Evidence suggests that treating these conditions may translate into reducing morbidity and/or mortality from vascular disease. Another lesson is that around-the-clock monitoring of BP and HR interpreted chronobiologically is needed, even in the absence of MH, to detect vascular disease risk associated with VVDs such as CHAT and DHRV, that cannot be assessed on the basis of casual clinic measurements, so that non-pharmacologic and/or pharmacologic intervention can be instituted in a timely fashion before the occurrence of adverse outcomes. Once implemented across the board rather than in selected patient populations, vascular disease could be curbed to a much larger extent at relatively low cost if the monitoring is offered directly to the public and care providers become involved only after detection of a VVD. A website has to be built to interest many people and to provide cost-free analyses in exchange for the data, as is now provided worldwide by the BIOCOS project on a small scale (corneOO 1 (g),umn.edu). This is an alternative to apolypill, given without a chronobiologic diagnosis that as yet neither detects nor treats VVDs and VVSs. A. Incidence of a given VVA alone or in combination with other VVA(s) and corresponding risk, assessed by actual outcomes within 6 years. B. Risk associated with each VVA alone or complicated by 1 to 3 additional VVAs. © Halberg. Figure 4.B. Additional WDi (N] 99 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Holiday CHAT* as host but not as guest ' Systolic [$. top? and Diastolic (D bottom i Hluod Pressure iBPi of FH i.M, 90y CHAT C [read i a n H y per - A mp iiki de-Tonsi on {er* wingJ, a cond i( wn eharaeteri zed Qy a amplitude of BP eneeednng (he upper 95% prediction limit of cynically healthy peers matched by ge-ider ar>d age associated with a large increase in cardtavascular disease risk Figure 5. FH attended parties on both Christmas Eve (host), and Christmas Day (guest). As host, he could not follow his favorite task of writing. In the capacity of a guest, he took the liberty of unobtrusively doing some professional homework. The latter, but not the former role, was acceptable. Situational 24-hour transient CHAT, as here recorded, was limited to a single 24-hour span. It is smoothed out by the fit of a fit of a 24-hour cosine to 7 days of observations as a whole. © Halberg. 100 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Percentage of Daily and Overall CHAT in 45 Week-long Records of FH (M, 89y) * Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP) CHAT 100 O O 0 I r I l I i I.....f-t-ir I i 1 -r-r-i i ■ ■ ■ i i ■ i i i i I Ü c □ CT 0) 100 80 60 40 20 0 Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP) CHAT DBP-CHAT * j***^'diagnosed in overall profile ♦ t / \ ! July 5 (birthday) 1 A J \ 1/1 Juhy27 R \ 9 fl [symposium) ft i " TTTTTTn I 1 I T I ■ r 1 1 I F l 1 T 1 1 Respite If 'i r 1/4 2/15 3/29 5/10 6/21 8/2 9/13 10/25 12/6 Time (calendar date in 2009) * Large diamonds indicate (hat CHAT was detected in overall record, irrespective of the percentage of the daily occurrence of CHAT (Circadian H^pcr-^mpiitudc-Tcnsion, "overawing"), & condition characterized hv a 24-hour amplitude of blood pressure (in a 2-component model consisting of cosine curves with periods of 24 and 12 hours) exceeding the upper 9$% prediction limit of clinically healthy peers matched by gender en age, associated with a large increase in cardiovascular disease risk. Whereas occasional daily CHAT is found in many usually week-long profiles, ii is present overall in only a few records, day-to-day changes in MF.SOR and circadian aerophase contributing to a reduction in the 24-hour amplitude estimated from the cniirc records. Figure 6. CHAT during about 5 months of preparation for a symposium is lost in the last two post-symposium records, each of 1-week duration. It would seem that after 14 days of normalcy, one could dispense with monitoring. © Halberg. 101 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 by lfre-itulu'ji Bta)yU9 of imWatwv Wood arc issrt rsi* uttst, Pt*v*ruw6 ind Cufrtlv* S+HU*lp-bm«4 Individ^*) Hiitth CUim 33 Multilingual Analyse tali Bom Lit- £n j!»7B5vlMb: I ' l I ll ■ ll" i.- L i r _ ■ italic- IUI pan 'j r 4. Scrudry flf S(3Bf* 2 EducaLion elthi PuUk *nd Of Car* Pf g -hfl mmmi 5 Evi*a Mr* CMl ladilhiii HhNimi iiniiM n*. Itp ***rm■wMitwiit lywM F-tWI 1 IflttXI IHI rtH DHkHV 4 I 11 -■ ■ i wh-,„_H mi, 1 f f I ■ !■ H ■ r fee MM » Mm PliJ n IM •» , 1>m» it Ni '» lid? Figure 8. 42 years after a 48-hour BP profile at 2- to 3-hour intervals during the waking hours, on 63 patients, among those available to follow-up, nearly 50% of those without a circadian BP overswing, CHAT, are alive, while all with CHAT are dead. © Halberg. 102 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 l I Mil A" I Oh S IN DEALING WITH BLOOD PRESSURE (BP) INTERPRETED BY FIXED LIMITS I AND CASUAL ME ASUHEVENTS OR AUTOMATIC OFFICE HOUR PHO FILES) Ht-iO tar r'iwttM'VinQ 150/100) mmHg is the diagnosis consistent with current criteria, but in any intermediate range of BP MESORs, failure to assess day-to-day variability and to use time-varying limits, flaws current directives of BP assessment. Center: The diagnosis of "borderline hypertension" based on casual office measurements assessed by WHO limits is no better than flipping a coin. Right: Even for patients with a 24-hour mean of SBP/DBP around 140/90 mmHg, "hypertension" is not detected 22% of the time because of the lack of consideration of the circadian variation. Fixed thresholds can be replaced by time-varying reference standards (chronodesms). One can rely on series of BP measurements for at least 7 days; they should be repeated but are a practical start. © Halberg. 103 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 HYPERTENSION AND NORMOTENSION AT SAME CLOCK-HOUR OR EVEN IN 24-HOUR AVERAGE ON SAME DAY OF WEEK* 140 IS5 95 E.'""' " 7 Dm** Amplitudo. ÍA P*riód, t 0i 3-H OP DC Dt:C0 08:09 llflfl 1RQD Tims (Clock Hours) ME j Ofl •Hn/rrttm^iont Sun Tik Thj Sil Q- 20 a 9 1 S ô a Circa- 41*1 -MptM -ri nľais 1 7 HQ ' Syslolk BlMd Presturí? (&HP) □! 30 ar CD minulí 4 [« 3D Ósyi\f\ = 762) ovpr IdMlned cfoy (Wl) or w«k (lap right) reveal rrl*1řv* pf*ľfll«t4n5* ol elncwíiaii vi. IťiIrtdHn í*mp*rwnlillKritom rijhli: JCLI (M, 33f, urclicalňd:-; Cl = ss% ewvrírienw miiML Figure 10. Single measurements from an automatic around-the-clock monitoring for 30 days, stacked along an idealized 24-hour scale, can be compatible with the diagnosis of normotension, hypertension and hypotension, underscoring the need for systematic chronobiologically-interpreted long-term self-surveillance (left). Even 24-hour averages on different days can be compatible with MESOR-hypertension or MESOR-normotension (right, top). In part, the day-to-day differences are accounted for by an about weekly pattern (right, bottom). O Halberg. 104 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Altered Blood Pressure and Heart Rale Variability in "Prediabetes" but not in Notmogly cemia 5 9 tí I ■ \ ■ D BsalicCHAT NESOft^yptrteniion P - 0 D01 None tm vX,MTlí*Ií"A"X,íí"Ii;I,K,I*I*!,I,^Iji*I,t. Group Figure J J. A. Figure 77. A. With the relatively small sample sizes of 6 patients with a moderately elevated fasting glucose and a slightly abnormal glucose tolerance versus 6 individuals with acceptable corresponding results (healthy controls), all undergoing 7-day/24-hour ambulatory BP and HR monitoring, analyses indicate that a chronobiological approach works when a classification in terms of "dipping" based on the day-night ratio (DNR) fails to detect abnormality. Indeed, chronobiologically, no abnormality was detected in the light of time-specified reference standards qualified by gender and age among the 6 controls, but 4 of the 6 pre-diabetic patients showed one or more VVAs (P<0.001). By contrast, in both groups, there were two patients with a DNR > 20% ("excessive dipping") and one patient with a DNR < 10% ("non-dipping"). It was thus impossible to discriminate the group of patients with pre-diabetes from the healthy controls in terms of "dipping", when a chronobiological interpretation worked (46). B. Orcadian parameters and day-night ratios (DNRs) of systolic BP are compared between groups of presumably healthy MESOR-normotensive subjects and pre-hypertensive subjects with incipient signs of minimal change hypertensive retinopathy (47; cf. 48). Minimal retinal alterations, presumably reflecting an increased vascular disease risk, are associated with a higher MESOR and a larger circadian amplitude of SBP (P<0.01). A classification in terms of dipping, based on the DNR of SBP, however, is misleading, as the pre-hypertensive patients as a group are "dippers" with a DNR between 10% and 20%, but the MESOR-normotensive controls as a group are non-dippers, with a DNR of SBP below 10%. © Halberg 105 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Day-NighL Ralio (DXR) of SysLolic Blood Pressure (SBP) l-'oturid ABNORMAL in HEALTH buL ACCEPTABLE in "PRE-JIYPERTENS ION" + I 15 H a id I °- 5 Systolic Blood Pressure Presumably Healthy "Pre- Hypertensives" □ippara ABNORMAL DNR TNS Non-Dippcu ACCEPTABLE DNR PNB * Comparison of "Truly Normotensive Subjects" (TNS) and "Putatively Normotensive Subjects" (PNS) with Incipient Signs of Hypertensive Retinopathy. Data from P Cugini et al. (27). Minimal retinal alterations, presumably reflecting an increased vascular disease risk, are NOT associated with abnormal DNR, but rather with the chronobiologically predicted elevation in circadian BP amplitude (middle, right).t Figure 11. B. 106 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 illustrative actual (EH) parametre approach Sphygmochron using: SrnDBMlTV n Ml ■ Abslrac: (top) and actual [bottom) ron pa ra metric approach ■I i * r: -i — rtC ' "Mil ■■i »JIM | M — -■™ 'JFI i*1 HUM' — "M 'in ~iT ■ra ĹE Ĺ3ZI it j (•'hell Hlri)nn im ■■ m if tu 111 im i ■! mié mu f- ll ti i i ■M] littataifeiiiuitan 71'M " i*í i " MUlflt ľttr*-Mih ľl m in* i"- ■m mi nif IWll ] jnr (>r,i«íaHc*w bp dílVifínjixrtľEn: loctul IChtdJkJ KUB1. K-liS* hl b* LlťldÉI -lliibMhfntliŕU'ljrUfcl-'Mt' ISťlii inííi/IQ umrťrriU 1*3 Hl ťi-fl* IhiUr tTttlL3 ll| JTďlÉ Vttí lMl| * #Hfcor, hlgpf ifHP {DBr' rqw Jl 414 p(í ínr tflWw, hlpof PTI-wri !ÍW !WSI íl J S t ■» 'i ir ii — 1 I * ?r+Ul* Sta m w «1 < in íl Figure 13. Left: A chronobiologic serial section of SBP of JF shows original data in the top row. They are self-measured in lunar cycles 4-8, automatically recorded by ABPM in and after cycle 9. These are interpreted chronobiologically (temporally locally) in weekly intervals. P-values in cycles 4-8 (fourth row) indicate that the dominant circadian rhythm is not consistently demonstrable in the case of self-measurements. Most P-values are above the dashed horizontal line (P=0.05). By contrast, in cycles 9-13 showing analyses of the denser automatic measurements including nightly values (see top row's now lower values), most P-values hug the bottom line (P<0.01), documenting the indispensability of continuous ABPM monitoring, if false or incomplete diagnoses are to be forestalled in this case (and in others, not shown). Right: For cycles 9-13 only, acrophases ((|)s) of HR and DBP are shown for comparison with those of SBP. Note in cycle 11a lengthening of the circadian period, seen as delaying obliquely ascending (|)s, scanning 24 hours (= 360°) in cycles 11 and 12, with 24-hour resynchronization of HR, seen as horizontal (|)s, but not yet of DBP and SBP with still oblique (|)s during cycle 13. © Halberg. 109 Spwirt^i rim*, t.irli iliMmin initT\«Kof S\vfuHi RJochI Prfviun* (JJ7: F".6l> wtstart) Tnteimooilts) Figure 14. Spectrograms of SBP of JF, a woman 61 years of age at start of around-the-clock measurements analyzed with intervals ranging from 1 to 12 months (10). The presence of multiple periods is more clearly seen with an interval of 12 months (bottom right) than with shorter intervals, but with a loss of detail in the long intervals. Temporally local alterations (during episodes of adynamic depression, not indicated) are better seen with shorter intervals (top row). © Halbergt. NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Ľluanmniu UeboĽls Noelumil ttíM** Iram Trurtrmrit [li ftiBh at Sli-oir «11J Hc-iH-iuu^U-, jrBjTlEi Ihm p^puliniinr iIIA (ľ ruar in HFSGB.KnpmaHiniinn [|UC| Jnd l*oinH»i lpiitHtTl hid-c LMTinŕj Suee-iti of Trtjimwil liJA-CK Figure 15. Illustrative results support the need for continued surveillance and for a chronomic analysis of BP records. I. Nocturnal hypertension: data stacked from 11 days of around-the-clock monitoring. Office spotchecks cannot detect nocturnal pathology. II A: Among risk factors, an excessive circadian BP amplitude (A) raises the risk of ischemic stroke most. II B: Among risk factors, an excessive circadian BP-A raises the risk of nephropathy most. IIC: An excessive circadian BP-Ais a risk factor for ischemic stroke independent from the 24-hour mean (MESOR). Ill A: Individualized assessment (by CUSUM) of a patient's initial response and subsequent failure to respond to autogenic training (AT) (EO, F, 59y). Ill B: Individualized BP chronotherapy. Lower circadian BP- 2A and MESOR (M) after switching treatment time from 08:30 (left) to 04:30 (right). Ill C - Control chart assesses efficacy of individualized chronotherapy. © Halberg. m NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 INFRAPIAN SVSTOÜC BLOOD PRESSURE (SBP.i VARIABILITY ASSOCIATED WITH PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGIC RESPONStS" I CP 'HI HI^SOFl (nlrtiHfll . hp n ——» •«• ii 1 L ■-. M :-i ■♦—i i i—~ ■ CtruEli hi- riunhlr Arnpli'iJUC i'mmHgi ■A d « i t; it » it ■■ms Liirtftdlirt Acrdpriut | l 3BQ ■ Mn;0 lOD.ÜÜj I 4 ■ If II » U II II 14 ll ii it ly ii 14 t4j ig ;i Turn iCilnndJi Dal* In April iM'.i 4L^|IUUIIr ind ^Arilmri' I rfrr liinr.n AltUTI*r 1 l-dty ir.nlilhi*ir,a id II U It II IV Figure 16. A. Figure 16. A. MESOR-hypertension is detected for the first 5 days but not for the next 16 days in February (top left) or for another 11-day record in April (bottom left) in the case of a 60-year old woman (CH). The circadian amplitude is acceptable for the first 3 days in February, but is intermittently excessive in February (top middle) but not in April (bottom middle). The circadian acrophase is deviant only at the beginning of the record in February (top right) and is invariably acceptable in April (bottom right). These results suggest the desirability to monitor for longer than 24 hours to obtain a reliable diagnosis (17). B. Abnormality can occur while most or all measurements lie within acceptable limits. Average profiles of systolic (left) and diastolic (right) BP of FH (M, 90y) are within time-specified 90% prediction limits of healthy peers matched by gender and age (top). The fit of a 24-hour cosine curve to the data reveals the presence of CHAT for both SBP and DBP (bottom). © Halberg. 112 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Figure 16. B. 113 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Earth and Biosphere 3 i V. »01 C^griPiFCi v\& Antipodal G*«naflnfl:E Diiturbann irdts ja ttf limn Hü 5» v«nr Una lfc1TE tVolflflUD» Vfntfltl C^HBtUWIt ^im Bd Interplanetary Magnetic Index and Biosphere ■1 «4< Ca*rgnj«n« with Solar Wine Spwo fSlVSl ...J ■i.'tr Al eloper V»rlibi»t CcngnMnl #Hh SWS- Figure 17. Human mental functions (vigor, mood and 1-minute time estimation) are as closely associated with our cosmos as is the well-known association of the sun's and the earth's magnetism (extreme lower right). Systolic (S) BP monitoring for preventive health maintenance provides data that, as a dividend, may serve to monitor the cosmos and its influence on societal diseases by testing the likelihood that congruence (correspondence of common cycles in and around us) is due to chance. Anticipated influence of the antipodal index of geomagnetic disturbance aa (top) and of the non-photic environment (gauged by solar wind speed, an approximation of interplanetary magnetism) on human psychophysiology was assessed by means of the congruence of periods of their spectral components (denned by overlap of the CIs of periods, in the frequency range of one cycle in 2.5 years to 3 cycles per year). The biological data stem from 40 years of self-measurements of oral temperature (Temp), SBP, diastolic (D) BP and heart rate (HR) and of ratings of mood and vigor and the estimation of 1-minute by counting (1MTE), performed about 5 times a day by a clinically healthy man (RBS) (64, 65). Congruences (assessed by means of odds ratios based on the noncentral hypergeometric distribution) found for 1MTE and for several other variables more than equal that of the known association of helio- and geo-magnetism (bottom, last column on right of dashed vertical 114 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 line). Mental functions show higher congruence than somatic functions. Among the latter, SBP is responsive, perhaps constituting a seemingly acceptable proxy for the mental functions. P-values are based on the non-central Fisher hypergeometric distribution, with CIs computed using Fisher's exact test, used since the null hypothesis was rejected in some, yet not all cases. © Halberg. Prof. Germaine Cornelissen, Dr. Vicedirector Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Integrative Biology and Physiology, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 115 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 AN 11-YEAR CYCLE IN MATERNAL MORTALITY? Germaine Cornelissen1, Lyazzat Gumarova2, Franz Halberg1 1 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA 2 Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, Republic of Kazakhstan Abstract. The detection of cycles in us, corresponding to the known average length of cycles around us, is an indispensable, but in itself insufficient step for the study of shared frequencies and of their possibly corresponding behavior. With the qualification that even similar cycles in and around us, in themselves, are not evidence for an association, we here report a hint that human pregnancy, like the human baby, may be influenced by interplanetary and/or terrestrial magnetism, a probability deserving further investigation by examining, when the opportunity arises, whether an amplification, damping or disappearance of an environmental spectral component, is associated (perhaps with a lag) with the amplification or damping of the biospheric component. The fourteen areas of the Republic of Kazakhstan provided, via the program "Motherhood and childhood" of its Ministry of Health, data on maternal mortality, that is on the rate of death among women during pregnancy or within 42 days after the end of any pathological condition associated with pregnancy, excluding accident-related causes. The data were yearly, and each series covered 11 consecutive years, Figure 1. A decreasing trend in the data, Table 1, was removed, as shown in Figure 2. (Before attributing this trend to improved care, longer series will have to examine the possibility that the trend is at least in part contributed by a cycle with a period, x, longer than the length of the available time series.) Method. The detrended data were analyzed by single cosinor, first as separate series fitted to a 11-year cosine curve and its harmonics. The amplitudes and acrophases thus obtained were summarized by population-mean cosinor (1-3). Results. The no-undecennian-rhythm assumption was rejected (P=0.007), as seen from Figure 3, displaying the average data from the 14 areas, together with the 11-year cosine curve, its characteristics being obtained by population-mean cosinor. The second harmonic, with a 5.5-year period, was also found to be statistically significant (P=0.024). The corresponding composite model is shown with the data in Figure 4, providing an improved approximation of the data. Discussion. It has previously been reported that the human baby is a very sensitive magnetometer, exhibiting, for instance, putative solar periods, Figure 5 (4; cf. 5, 6). Figures 6A and 6B show the time course of Wolf's sunspot numbers during the span for which data on maternal mortality are available. It appears to the naked eye that the fit of an 11-year cycle alone reflects an as-yet also putative cosmic effect better than the added fit of a harmonic. Whether the harmonic reflects an alteration of the waveform and, if so, the factor(s) underlying this alteration are questions warranting further analyses on longer series. Whether the pregnant mother is also influenced by the cosmos, perhaps by factors related, among others, to the about 11-year Horrebow (7)-Schwabe (8) sunspot cycle, must be established by longer series that allow more than cross-correlation and cross-spectra or cross-wavelets, but the fact that short series, of the length analyzed herein, can provide results validated by longer ones, has been documented (9). Long time series covering several decades will be essential to see whether any environmental cycles from space or terrestrial weather influence maternal mortality, among other human affairs (10, 11). Amplifications, damping or lack of detection of the environmental cycles could then be tested for corresponding changes in the biospheric component(s), with the possibility that in the case of disappearance of an environmental cycle, the biospheric component may be damped, but may persist if it is genetically coded (12, 13) and surfaces above the noise level, 116 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 as it did in Figures 3, 4 and 6 (while the naked eye fails to reliably detect any cycle in the original or detrended data, shown in Figures 1 and 2). REFERENCES 1. Halberg F. Chronobiology: methodological problems. Acta med rom 1980; 18: 399-440. 2. Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Chronomedicine. In: Armitage P, Colton T. (Eds.) Encyclopedia of Biostatistics, 2nd ed. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons Ltd; 2005. p. 796-812. 3. Refinetti R, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. Procedures for numerical analysis of circadian rhythms. Biological RhvthmResearch2007:38(4N):275-325.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09291010600903692 4. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Otsuka K, Syutkina EV, Masalov A, Breus T, Viduetsky A, Gräfe A, Schwartzkopff O. Chronoastrobiology: neonatal numerical counterparts to Schwabe's 10.5 and Hale's 21-year sunspot cycles. In memoriam Boris A. Nikityuk. Int J Prenat Perinat Psychol Med 2001; 13: 257-280. 5. Malkova I, Syutkina EV, Cornelissen G, Masalov A, Halberg F. Neonatal transdisciplinary Nikityuk cycles include signature of global solar cycle in premature human labor? VII International Crimean Conference "Cosmos and biosphere", Sudak, Crimea, Ukraine, October 1-6, 2007. p. 127-128. 6. Syutkina EV, Cornelissen G, Mitish M, Narogan MV, Surgyk AV, Krylova OS, Masalov A, Schwartzkopff O, Halberg F. Neonates as particularly sensitive magnetoreceptors? World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 114-115. 7. Thiele ThN. De Macularum Solis antiquioribus quibusdam observationibus Hafniae institutis. Astronomische Nachrichten 1859; 50: 259-261. 8. Schwabe H. Sonnen-Beobachtungen im Jahre 1843. Astronomische Nachrichten 1844; 21: 254-256 (no. 495). 9. Cornelissen G, HalbergF, Sonkowsky R, Siegelova J, HomolkaP, Dusek J, Fiser B. Meta-analysis of Horrebow's and Schwabe's scholarship with a view of sampling requirements. In: Proceedings, Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, Brno, Czech Republic, July 7-10, 2009. p. 141-158. http:// web.fnusa.cz/files/kfdr2009/sbornik_2009.pdf 10. Chizhevsky AL. Action de l'ionisation de l'atmosphere et de l'ionisation artificielle de l'air sur les organismes sains et les organismes malades. In: Piery M. (Ed.) Traite de Climatologie: Biologique et medicale. Tome premier. Paris: Masson et Cie; 1934. p. 662-673. 11. Sigel F (Dreier W, Lerche D, Übers.; Goring H, Wissenschaftl. Red. der deutschsprachigen). Schuld ist die Sonne. Thun/Frankfurt am Main: Harri Deutsch; 1979. 215 pp. 12. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Tvildiani L, Gigolashvili M, Janashia K, Toba T, Revilla M, Regal P, Sothern RB, Wendt HW, Wang ZR, Zeman M, Jozsa R, Singh RB, Mitsutake G, Chibisov SM, Lee J, Holley D, Holte JE, Sonkowsky RP, Schwartzkopff O, Delmore P, Otsuka K, Bakken EE, Czaplicki J, International BIOCOS Group. Chronobiology's progress: season's appreciations 2004-2005. Time-, frequency-, phase-, variable-, individual-, age- and site-specific chronomics. J Appl Biomed 2006; 4: 1-38. http://www.zsf.jcu.cz/vyzkum/jab/4_l/halberg.pdf 13. Halberg F, Sello S, Cornelissen G. Para-tridecadal component in neonatal anthropometry in Moscow by the late Boris Nikityuk. World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 116-117. 117 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Maternal Mortality - Original Data Sits: —01 —'-02 - 03 04 -"-OS 06 --C7 -«-OS —OS ID ■ 11 -°- 12 ■ 13 — - 14 — 15 iä — 17 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 Tim« [calendar years) 2O0& 2010 Figure 1. Original yearly data (2000-2010) on maternal mortality from 14 areas of Kazakhstan, for two towns and for the country as a whole. © Halberg. Maternal Mortality - Detrended Data Sit«: 150 —»-01 —5-02 - - - 03 04 05 06 —> -07 — - 08 -* - 09 10 - «-11 -a. 12 - - IS -i- 14 -■-15 - 16 -17 2MM 2006 Time (calendar years) 2006 2010 Figure 2. Since maternal mortality decreases numerically in all 16 sites investigated and, with statistical significance, in Kazakhstan as a whole (see Table 1), yearly data were detrended prior to analysis. © Halberg. 118 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 20 2000 3001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2009 2010 2011 Time (calendar year) Figure 3. Yearly means and standard errors (SE) of maternal mortality for the 14 areas of Kazakhstan are fitted with a 11-year cosine curve detected with statistical significance by population-mean cosinor. © Halberg. 70 Deli-ended (mean * lSE: Trial Period; 11.0 years; Percent Rhylhm - 14%h P(ziefo-ampli(iijde test) - 0.007 5.5 years: 19% 0.024 20 2000 2001 200Z 2003 2004 2005 20QB 2007 Z005 2009 ZD1Q 2011 Time (calendar year) Figure 4. By population-mean cosinor, the second harmonic with a period of 5.5 years was also detected with statistical significance. Accordingly, the yearly means are fitted with the composite model, including cosine curves with periods of 11.0 and 5.5 years. © Halberg. 119 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ARE BIRTH STATISTICS IN MOSCOW INFLUENCED BY THE SOLAR CYCLE?' Boys Girls lJRJU t9ft 1940 [044 1H"M 1080 1DO0 IflZO 1 HO I16D IMP time [Cjilr>ndar Vear) Figure 5. Body length, head circumference and weight at birth in Moscow, Russia, measured between 1874 and 1985 (112 years), is characterized by about 10.5- and/or 21.0-year cycles, which are in keeping with a possible modulation of human morphology by the solar activity cycle. Not shown herein is a para-tridecadal cycle detected by wavelets and validated with the 95% confidence interval of its period (13). © Halberg. 120 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Time {calendar year) 2000 2001 £002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 5010 2011 Time (calendar year) Figure 6. Yearly means of maternal mortality fitted with the 11-year cosine curve are plotted together with monthly Wolf numbers during the same 11-year span. A reverse relation is suggested (A). Validation of this finding will require analysis of similar data over longer spans. The negative relation between maternal mortality and solar activity is less obvious when Wolf numbers are displayed with the composite model including cosine curves with periods of 11.0 and 5.5 years (B). © Halberg. 121 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Table 1: The decreasing trend in maternal mortality in different provinces and two cities (with the status od State importance) of Kazakhstan and periods detected in detrended data* Geographic location SiteN r P Period (years) Akmola 01 -0.619 0.042 Aktobe 02 -0.639 0.034 -2.2 Almaty Province 03 -0.786 0.004 Atyrau 04 -0.462 0.152 East Kazakhstan 05 -0.845 0.001 Jambyl 06 -0.361 0.276 West Kazakhstan 07 -0.478 0.137 Karaganda 08 -0.411 0.210 -2.2 Kyzyl-Orda 09 -0.147 0.665 Kostanay 10 -0.556 0.076 Mangistau 11 -0.550 0.080 Pavlodar 12 0.502 0.116 North Kazakhstan 13 -0.363 0.272 -5.5 South Kazakhstan 14 -0.576 0.063 -5.5 Almaty city 15 -0.294 0.380 Astana city 16 -0.426 0.191 Kazakhstan 17 -0.817 0.002 *Periods from rhythmometric summary revealed 2nd and 5th harmonics of 11 years, each to be statistically significant in two areas, albeit without correction for multiple testing. Note that 8 of the first 14 correlation coefficients (r) are above 0.5 (11 are above 0.4 and 12 are above 0.35). Prof. Germaine Cornelissen, Dr. Vicedirector Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Integrative Biology and Physiology, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 122 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 HUMAN BABIES: A SLOW-TO-READ, SENSITIVE POPULATION MAGNETOMETER, ALSO READ BY WAVELETS Stefano Sello1, Franz Halberg2, Germaine Cornelissen2 Mathematical and Physical Models, Enel Research, Pisa, Italy; 2Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA Abstract. Wavelet analyses can usefully complement the nonlinearly extended cosinor and prompt focus on para-tridecadals, cycles whose 95% confidence interval of the period falls within the range of near 30-40-year length. They here complement the analyses of nonstationary neonatal somatic cycles. In this case, wavelets served for the resolution of a para-tridecadal for body length at birth during part of the time (after 1930), along with other cycles previously detected in neonatal body length, head circumference, and birth weight. Chronobiological serial sections with the frequency revealed by wavelets in neonatal body length after 1930 document the statistically significant presence of a para-tridecadal of 32.95 years, or with a frequency near it, before 1930 as well. The global approaches by least squares spectra of an entire series and the local gliding windows of sections of the series make this approach glocal, whereas wavelets are glocal in themselves as an addition to the combined glocality of spectral windows of an entire series and sections thereof. Wavelets, in turn, can be complemented by further purely local approaches such as chronomic serial sections at a certain period of interest. Aim. Application of a set of complex Morlet functions, wavelets with adjustable parameters (1; cf. 2-3), to three anthropometric time series, each covering 112 years (y), serves to compare findings with results (4) obtained earlier by the nonlinearly extended cosinor (5-7), to examine the extent of complementarity between the cosinor and the particular wavelets used in dealing with nonstationary periodicities and to apply wavelets to annual data on the antipodal (aa) geomagnetic index which covers data over a similar span using the same time-frequency parameters as those used for the anthropometric data. The need to vary such parameters is seen in a display of group sunspot numbers. Background in aa. The geomagnetic aa-index (annual values spanning 130 years) is a global geomagnetic activity index, derived from the local (K) indices from two approximately antipodal observatories, with units of 1 nT. While laboratories providing the data for aa changed with time, current observatories used are Hartland in the UK, operated by the British Geological Survey, and Canberra in Australia, operated by Geoscience Australia. Since it is based on data from only two observatories, it is the simplest of all the 3-hourly planetary indices. Provided averages over 12 hours or longer are used, the index strongly correlates with the ap and am indices, which are derived using data from more extensive observatory networks. The main advantages of using aa indices are that the time series spans go further back (to 1868) than those of most other planetary index time series. Up-to-date values are also produced and made available on a weekly basis. General background. The nonlinearly extended cosinor serves for the analysis of a time series as a whole (globally) in combination with moving spectral windows and/or chronobiologic serial sections for examining a component (also locally) in time, i.e., for the changes occurring at a given frequency in sections of the span investigated. Wavelets in turn provide an overall view by glocal (global and local) analyses in time. In the case on hand, the two methods resolve complementary aspects of putative signatures of the cosmos in neonatal anthropometry. Thus analyzed, we found biospheric population rhythms with serially-independent sampling as to individuals, with each set of babies examined in a given year contributing a single measurement to each of three long time series (4), Figure 1. Some of the periods found can also be detected in individuals' longitudinal measurements, actually continued for decades more densely around the clock. Longitudinally in 123 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ARE BIRTH STATISTICS IN MOSCOW INFLUENCED BY THE SOLAR CYCLE?* Boys Girls E o m c in £ ü T? «3 V Ol I CD 20.75 11*JQSj 45.7*5 CUM folSt 1,S*f' 30,73 {1&4a;2&BB4 1-1J HJ-SSi 1-6BI 0L44 [OLM; 1JIH) et r M i M.3S.1 tM.ft 35.3) -1- i 1 - f**.gs (4Ü.SI: 67471 Up 1DO(1F1BtH Iftifl (6-70; 11.01) »(1.1*0* I860 19QQ 1820 1940 i960 1880 1S80 1900 1920 1040 19W 1080 Time (Calendar Year) ■ H«40rt«d ovar 112 VBin [1 B7*-1965p. HOPÜnisr ainptysl* osBmatfl of peiiodi (r. y«»r»], doubl« amplitude (2Afi ME50R (chi«>rwni*>-*al|trtl»a rntani M( J no «lop« {c^ "d* c« limits. 4/91 Figure 1. Solar cycles' signatures in a biospheric magnetometer: the human neonate (4). See Figures 2A and 2B for the about 33-year BEL, that was missed until it appeared prominently after 1930 in wavelets, Figure 3. © Halberg. 124 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Component with periods of (loph 3IG5 (middle) and 53.67 [bottom) years charactering length at birth (LCJ of boys In Moscow. Russia, are mora or less Consistently detected With Stable phases, as shown by chronobmlogical sections' Sir r iuhfm 1 j itmn ll?4 tin 19» V EH Time [calendar year} "VcSi^ iridffl***tiiFJlr-5 Mjlrttc of rtyv-m if yffirr-«iji-sl«.mi*' Arrets* a*We n*i*ml -i*pi*4tut>ti Figure 2A. single individuals and transversely in populations, humans constitute sensitive magnetometers and still broader cosmometers, revealing, among others, Schwabe, Hale and para-tridecadal Briickner-Egeson-Lockyer (BEL) cycles, Kondratiev's about-50-year periods and near-60-year or longer cycles. All are aeolian, changing in period, amplitude and/or phase. The BEL came to the fore in the neonatal data on body length by the combination of the methods here used and prompted additional extended cosinor analyses and chronobiologic serial sections that glocally showed the intermittency of the BEL. Whether these cycles in us and in the aa index around us evolved with the former mirroring the latter, subtraction and addition by the sun (in amplifying, damping or even losing and regaining a frequency, respectively) tell the extent to which the rhythms in the biosphere of populations still respond to their counterparts in space weather by amplification or dampening but persist in the absence of the environmental cycle, as do some rhythms in individuals (Figure 7 in [8]). 125 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Components with periods of 20-83 (top). 32-M jmidttle] end 53 GT (bottom| ysvi characterizing length al birth {LG} of girls In Moscow, Russia, ate more or less cons isle nlly detected with stable phasftB, be shown by chronoblDlDglcal BHctiona* 54 Time (calendar year) t>m oipn»K= - r-T^abrti tagws.afllW ■ |lIII IN . runiw ^flat" Snr irtnraiJ ftgW N*7Sf Figure 2B. Figures 2A and 2B. Body length at birth in boys and girls, respectively, is characterized by 3 main spectral components, some with intermittent reductions in amplitude (distance between the 2 curves in sections 2, 5 and 8). Didecadal (top section) and tridecadal (middle section) but not quindecadal (bottom section) cycles show relatively short spans of aeolian loss of statistical significance in sections 4 and 7 and some drifting acrophases, the latter in keeping with changes in period. © Halberg. 126 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 In any event, our methodologic point is that a combination of glocal analyses - global spectra and/or spectral windows combined with gliding spectra and chronobiological serial sections on the one hand and a priori glocal wavelets complement each other in a unified science aimed at analyses after the alignment of anthropometric, biological and cosmophysical mapping, prospectively and in archives. Basic and applied purposes are thus served. First, time structure maps, physical or biological, represent reference values that dynamically define normalcy, including, by the use of certain physiological variables, a quantification of health (8). Second, analyses of physiological recordings aligned with cosmo-helio-geophysical data detect health hazards such as those posed by magnetic storms (9-11). Third, ongoing ontogenetic and phylogenetic mapping (12) may allow hypotheses concerning (if not cosmogeny, then) at least effects from beyond the solar system, if sensitive physiological indices change before a magnetic storm in interplanetary space, as human blood pressure may do, rather than concomitantly with a storm, as may human heart rate, or on the day following a magnetic storm, as human myocardial infarctions seem to do (9, 10; cf. 13). Available impressions from opportunistically available data await systematic ongoing analyses. Fourth, as humans venture further into extraterrestrial space, as on earth away from hospitals, the vascular monitoring for the early detection of disease risk syndromes, as a step toward the timely implementation of countermeasures for reducing risk, becomes a most important task, since illness can jeopardize a mission. Fifth, a cross-sectional human and eventually a longitudinal comparative physiological approach, examining the evolution of the physiological time structures, can lead to testable hypotheses concerning the origins of life. Omnis cyclus e cyclo. Reference data: Anthropometry in Moscow by the late Boris Nikityuk. Body weight and length and head circumference at birth were recorded from random samples of 25-150 babies in Moscow, Russia, over 112 y. The major component published (4) for body weight was of 63.02 y for boys with a CI (95% confidence interval) extending from 50.33 to 75.71 y, Figure 1 (4). In girls, body weight underwent a cycle of 64.39 y (CI: 40.91-87.87 y). Both boys and girls showed an added circadecadal (Horrebow-Schwabe) component of much smaller amplitude which was statistically significant only in girls (10.29; CI: 9.70, 11.01). In birth weight, a major component of variation common to boys and girls is an about 63-64-y cycle, validated nonlinearly. As to head circumference, the about 60-y component was dominant in boys and a longer periodicity dominated in girls. Other components found in the least squares spectra were circadidecadal signatures of the Hale cycle of sunspot bipolarity (of about 20 years), present in head circumference and body length at birth. The major component in neonatal body length in both genders was of about 50 years, a Kondratiev cycle reported in economics (14) and found in the incidence of stroke in several geographic locations (10, 15). Table 1 summarizes the periods found in a more recent nonlinearly extended cosinor analysis of body length, prompted by results from wavelets. The table includes a BEL. Figures 2Aand 2B show the time course of these several components, including variations in amplitudes and in particular also acrophase drifts that may reflect drifts in periods. Results from Morlet wavelets. The wavelets in Figure 3 are glocal in that they not only reveal by (arbitrary) colors the relative prominence of different components, but also the time course of the periods that are significant at the 5% level, since the black contour lines are the boundaries of confidence regions at 95%. Note that the ordinate is logarithmic, to resolve a wide range of frequencies to be examined (1, 16). Table 2 shows some of the periods detected by each of the two methods used and reveals a reasonable agreement between them. These can be complemented with focus on specific frequencies in Figures 2A and 2B. The row of P-values in serial sections reveals that the para-tridecadal component is not absent before 1930 but instead is statistically significant at the beginning of the record with a relatively short interruption of the P-values below 5% apparent in 127 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Figure 2A for boys, hardly surprising if the biosphere echoes the nonstationarity of its cosmos. Figure 4 demonstrates a very broad BEL and justifies the increasingly wider definition of the para-tridecadal BEL as an aeolian (nonstationary) band with a widely changing period, x, and/or phase having a 95% confidence interval of x around the 30-40-year period range. With this qualification, the display in Figure 4 is in keeping with the analysis of a para-tridecadal in neonatal body length on top of Figure 3, which gains in prominence after 1930 (changing from yellow to pink). Figure 5 in turn presents the best known solar cycle in the band from 9-12 y, generally accepted to change coherently with the variation of geomagnetism. Methodologic discussion. To cite General Sir Edward Sabine, "... it is certainly a most striking coincidence, that the period, and the epochs of minima and maxima, which M. Schwabe has assigned Table 1: Period(s), x, in body length at birth in Russia 1874-1985: data of Boris Nikityuk Boys (overall standard error: 0.44) Girls (overall standard error: 0.47) MESOR 52.224 (51.962, 52.687) 51.564 (51.288, 51.840) Slope -0.017 (-0.027, -0.008) -0.015 (-0.025, -0.005) Adjusted period 53.671 (46.12, 61.23) 53.666 (42.00, 65.33) Amplitude 0.76 (0.37, 1.14) 0.66 (0.21, 1.11) Acrophase -276°(-247, -305) -274° (-237,-311) Adjusted period 32.404 (29.35,35.13) 33.487 (25.88,41.09) Fundamental amplitude 0.38 (-0.00, 0.75) [0.21, 0.54] 0.43 (0.00, 0.87) [0.24, 0.62] Acrophase -243° (-187,-300) -207 (-151,-263) Adjusted period 20.441 (18.31, 22.57) 21.217 (19.18, 23.25) Fundamental amplitude 0.42 (0.28, 0.55) 0.47 (0.31, 0.62) Acrophase -184° (-129,-240) -158° (-109,-208) *95% confidence limits in () are conservative; in the case of a very slight overlap of zero beyond the second decimal, 1-parameter limits are given in [ ]. Table 2: Comparison of some periods (x) in Figure 1 with periods of wavelets in Figure 3 t=52.72, 20.28 WA 53-38,20 1=51.15,20.76 WA 53-38,20 t=58.83, 19.23 WA 64,20, 9.8 1=87.18,20.73 WA 64,20 t=63.02, 10.49 WA 64,12.6 1=64.39,10.29 WA 64,12.6,9.8 *There are some little differences on the periodicity values detected by the two methods, but essentially the results are concordant. A 32.4-year component in Table 1 was found after the wavelet result. Wavelet analysis shows strong and wide bands (in general better visible in the case of boys), and the exact global peak spectral values are not always easy to point out. The appearance of the near 60-y periodicity band in four of six series analyzed is of interest. Some more localized solar cycle type periodicities are also visible and it is useful to see their time evolution. Future longer time series, on a broader population, will be needed to allow us to better characterize and refine the above detected periodicities. 128 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 BOYS WAVELET ANALYSIS iL GIRLS -——^ — * -—*-Fi—ft* > I 1 Figure 3. Morlet wavelets of the late Boris Nikityuk's anthropometric data reveal time course, among others, of the signatures of periods listed in Figure 1 and, after 1930, a para-tridecadal signature as well. 129 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 to the variation of the solar spots, are absolutely identical with those which have here been assigned to the magnetic variations" (17; italics ours). With the data that became available in the interim, however, it is clear that helio- and geomagnetism have not behaved identically. As seen in Figure 6, geomagnetism is sometimes congruent with solar activity, but on occasion it is not. Figure 7 shows the most sensitive reflection of geomagnetism in human mood by the criterion of shared periods. We find that the odds ratio of this association has a CI (95% confidence interval), whose lower limit is above the upper limit of the CI of the association of interplanetary and terrestrial magnetism (18). Figure 5, regarded as an accurate long-term wavelet analysis of Schatten's sunspot data, shows the Horrebow (19)-Schwabe (20), but misses the para-tridecadal BEL (21). When different time-frequency parameters of the same method have not been used, with wavelets or spectrograms (22), different methods may serve the purpose of detecting often "hidden" aeolian cycles. General discussion. As to the recovery from the Little Ice Age, a prominent geophysicist indicates the need to assess multidecadal periodicities, adding that they are "natural" (Syun-ichi Akasofu's emphasis) phenomena and thatthey have to be taken into account "in order to determine the contribution of the manmade greenhouse effect" (24). By contrast, "Identifying [multidecadals] correctly and _ » n I 10 ■ am T9BEJ5" WAVELET ANALYSIS a? r 66 - 3JE*0 1JE>0 01 ?.PE0I UE-DI 1S£0 1920 1040 Time {year) 1O&0 i 1IJB Figure 4. Morlet wavelets reveal, in the antipodal geomagnetic index, the time course of periods centered on 5.4 -( 8-11.5) y and 31.5- 44.0 y. Note the broad yellow band starting near the about 20y Hale cycle and the near 30y BEL cycle, periodicities putatively associated in part with changes with long-term solar activity. 130 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Figure 5. With the particular time-frequency parameters used, an about-10-1 ly band is seen in group sunspot numbers (Hoyt and Schatten, Solar Physics 1998; 179: 189-217, and Solar Physics 1998; 181: 491-513), but any para-tridecadal trace is largely missed, a demonstration of the need for analyses with different time-frequency parameters. accurately", also Akasofu's plea, is hardly the explicit concern of others focusing on the length of the solar cycle as an indicator of solar activity associated with climate (25) that reveals a para-tridecadal Briickner-Egeson-Lockyer (BEL) cycle in environmental temperature, human affairs and global warming (23; cf. 26-31), an indispensable control, with notable exceptions (32, 33), is ignored. Wu et al. write that the variability with respect to the multidecadal trend is not distinguishable from that of white noise (p. 14891), while on p. 14892 we read that"... the overall EMD [empirical mode decomposition] trend and the multidecadal variability appear to be quite stationary in the whole data span" (34). This multidecadal variability is described as the 65y cycle, without concern for its uncertainty, which, in our hands, exceeds 4 y for air temperature 1850-2008, Figure 8 (24). Akasofu's plea regarding natural cycles is exactly ours and was documented in an analysis of multidecadal rhythms including environmental temperature, invited by the journal Geophysical Processes and Biosphere (21). Our paper was published bilingually after translation into Russian by Dr. Alexander Sidorin, to whom the authors are sincerely indebted (a well-intended backtranslation into English by the journal's staff [insisted upon by the editor], however, in some places mirrors neither our views nor our style). In the year since the first publication of our review, the data on rainfall in Sydney published by Charles Egeson (26) (aka J.J. George) (27) have also been meta-analyzed and published, Figure 9 (27), and other accumulating biospheric data sets have been updated by further (partly meta-) analyses. In particular, the freezing/breakup dates of rivers in (23), among related endpoints, were the concern 131 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Kp may peak at limes of relatively tow Wol. nuntoer although peaks in solar activity are usually assoaaleo with high Kp values PARTLY OPPOSITE TIME COURSES ARE FRAMED jar U Jw J4 Jan E* Jan BG Jjn 80 Ja"-9ľ Time (calendar üa(v) Figure 6. The planetary geomagnetic index Kp is not always congruent with sunspot numbters. © Halb erg. of Edward Brückner (28), who, shortly after Egeson (26), described an about 33- or 35y climate cycle, Figure 10. This periodicity is mostly ignored by those concerned about climate, even including reports (25) that relate specifically to an endpoint such as the length of the circadecadal Horrebow-Schwabe (19, 20) sunspot cycle, undergoing an about-35y cycle, reported shortly after the start of the 20th century by William J.S. Lockyer (29), the son of Sir Norman Lockyer, codiscoverer of helium and founder of the journal Nature (30). Father and son Lockyer followed up on the paper by Egeson (26) and the broader contribution by Brückner (28), promptly confirmed by Liznar (31), the topic of (too few, but important) recent contributions (32, 33). The often misspelled Bruckner (without an Umlaut) (35) or Brickner cycle (36) has a long history of being questioned (37, 38; cf. 39). After other meta-analyses by ourselves (39-41) and in keeping with the initials of the names of the discoverers (in alphabetical order), Brückner, Egeson and Lockyer, we proposed the term „BEL" (39-41), which was endorsed by a meeting of physicians, other biologists, and solar and other physicists in Moscow (42). Readers may be interested to know that nonphotic recurrent changes, such as the BEL, are aeolian, coming and going in terms of detectability and, when present, waxing and waning in amplitude and drifting in phase and frequency, bifurcating or splitting into more parts and reuniting, a nonstationary behavior that earned them the title of quasi-periodicity, to which Julius Bartels added an explicit reference to quasi-persistence (43; for review see 44). Exceptions notwithstanding (32, 33, 35), the BEL is today mostly forgotten and indeed it is difficult to define it in terms of a point estimate of its 132 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Ttwftttnil M*tgn«tic irn3ex in) trm Pi«f*aT» I II InttrrrjjjjnetJiry Magnetic Index bra. Biaaphan {hsrl T) vm. Sfloirugn«tpB.rn ■ ;.:,r,^L,,r,l ..PP. fiVvft Figure 7. Toward chronoastrobiology. Alexander Leonidovich Chizhevsky (1897-1964): "Peut-etre meme nos sentiments et nos pensees ne sont-ils qu'un faible echo de ces vibrations du cosmos .... Involontairement, une antique idee nous vient a l'esprit: notre connaissance des phenomenes de la nature ne serait pas autre chose qu'un echo, recu par nos organes, des processus reels de l'univers" ("Perhaps even our feelings and thoughts are just a weak echo of the vibrations of the cosmos .... Involuntarily an old idea comes to mind: Our knowledge of natural phenomena will not be different from an echo, received by our organs, of the real processes of the universe"). Anticipated influence of the antipodal index of geomagnetic disturbance aa (top) and of the non-photic environment (gauged by solar wind speed, an approximation of interplanetary magnetism) (bottom) on human psychophysiology was assessed by means of the congruence of periods, x, of their spectral components (defined by overlap of the 95% confidence intervals of the xs, in the frequency range of one cycle in 2.5 years to 3 cycles per year). The biological data stem from 40 years of self-measurements of oral temperature (Temp), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and heart rate (HR) and of ratings of mood and vigor and the estimation of 1-minute by counting (1MTE), performed about 5-6 times a day by a clinically healthy man, Dr. Robert B. Sothern. Congruences (assessed by means of odds ratios based on the noncentral hypergeometric distribution) found for 1MTE and for several other variables more than equal that of the known association of helio- and geo-magnetism (bottom, last column on right of dashed vertical line). Mental functions show higher congruence than somatic functions. Among the latter, systolic blood pressure (SBP) is responsive, perhaps constituting a seemingly acceptable proxy for the mental functions. P-values are based on the non-central Fisher hypergeometric distribution, with 95% confidence intervals computed using Fisher's exact test, used since the null hypothesis was rejected in some, yet not all cases (23). © Halberg. 133 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Figure 8. BEL cycle in variations of air temperature for 1850-2008: (a) original data, (b) time series without the trend, and (c) spectrum of time series obtained after trend removal. The dashed arrows in (c) indicate modulation-induced beats of around 64y oscillations (24). © Halberg. period, which is spread over more than 30-40 y, already in a meta-analysis of Bruckner's original extensive data (28, 40), Figure 8. Hence the BEL was denned as a cycle with a 95% confidence interval of the period that falls between 30 and 40 y and called a para- (= near, beside) tridecadal cycle. Most recently, we became even more liberal when, with the addition of 5 years of longitudinal data (of WRB), a BEL had a 95% confidence interval of the period extending with its upper limit not quite to 30 years, while it was a clear BEL with only about 30 y of data. We submit for consideration the term „para-tridecadal", with exact limits for the „para" to be specified by further experience. The BEL is found not only in environmental temperature records, Figure 8, that undergo cycles rarely considered by scholars in global warming or by those in human military-political, economic and other affairs (45; cf. 21). This update on the BEL may be complemented in the form of maps with glocality in time, namely a combination of analyses of a record as a whole (globally) and in sections (locally) as well as in space (46). An example of temporal glocality is Figure 10, with global analyses in the middle and local chronobiologic serial sections on the sides. Because of the aeolian nature of multidecadal components, a geographically global and local scrutiny (in space) is best complemented by glocality 134 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Egeson; Sydney Rainfall (1730-1893) Frequency (cyties/year} Figure 9. An extended linear-nonlinear cosinor spectrum of data taken off Egeson's graph on rainfall validates his, Francis Bacon's and others', e.g., Bruckner's, intuitions. Egeson may have been the first to compile and publish data in support of his proposition. An extended cosinor meta-analysis shows the great uncertainties involved, by ordering 95% confidence intervals of the periods. The 95% confidence interval of the 32.7y estimate extends from 25.2 to 40.3 y with Marquardt's "conservative" method* (47; cf. 27). The confidence intervals are called "ordering" since the assumption upon which they are based may not apply. They are offered until more pertinent procedures that account for nonstationarities become available. *Marquardt's (1963) algorithm (47) provides three measures of uncertainty of the period estimate and of the other parameters of the fitted model. One is an equivalent of the usual standard error and is called the "1 -parameter" approach. Another is called "conservative" in the sense that the corresponding confidence intervals are slightly wider than the "true" or "nonlinear" 95% limits. The nonlinear limits, a third measure, are more complex, but generally do not differ much from the more easily derived "conservative" approximation. In view of the non-stationarities of the biological data analyzed, the approach called "conservative" by Marquardt is actually too liberal and is used in the want of a more appropriate method that accounts for non-stationarities. © Halberg. 135 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 [ttlnaHirYwU JCjf 1>» f nets -f—I—I L I I*!* -6*1 lrn(U**|((i(] f- nmv4l HWi| kifmwt Fi^ f I ■\——— ——— t,A,1-t»,..U,f-k!..Ul.*U' Figure 10. Variations in acrophases of time series from Brückner [1890] calculated with the help of the cosinor method for 35y (left) and near 35y (right) periods of different parameters: (a) air temperature, (b) length of the ice-free period in rivers, (c) rains, (d) wine harvest, (e) frequency of cold winters, and (f) sunspots. The acrophases were estimated in a sliding window of 105 y with a step of 5 y. The central part indicates the values of periods, confidence intervals, and level of statistical significance (see text). © Halberg. in time, notably when we focus on climate, while we do not forget those responsible for the BEL, Figure 11. The concern for BEL and other cycles related to changes in climate may be far from trivial as large-scale human population collapses on the long-term scale have been associated with the synergistic effects of climate-related subsistence shortage and population growth (45). Conclusion. Meta-analyses by a set of Morlet wavelets visualize the time series of the several spectral components isolated earlier by the nonlinearly extended cosinor which we owe to the late Donald Marquardt (47), which is complemented by wavelets as an approach to glocality in time. In data on body length at birth, the approach by wavelets revealed a component of about 38 y after 1930, also detected, as a 33y band with its uncertainty by the extended cosinor. 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Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Otsuka K, Watanabe Y, Katinas GS, Burioka N, Delyukov A, Gorgo Y, Zhao Z Y, Weydahl A, Sothern RB, Siegel ova J, Fiser B, Dusek J, Syutkina EV, Perfetto F, Tarquini R, Singh RB, Rhees B, Lofstrom D, Lofstrom P, Johnson PWC, Schwartzkopff O, International BIOCOS Study Group. Cross-spectrally coherent -10.5- and 21-year biological and physical cycles, magnetic storms and myocardial infarctions. Neuroendocrinol Lett 2000; 21: 233-258. 16. Halberg F, Panofsky H. I. Thermo-variance spectra; method and clinical illustrations. Exp Med Surg 1961; 19, 284-309. 17. Sabine E. On periodical laws discoverable in the mean effects of the larger magnetic disturbances. No. II. Phil Trans Roy Soc Lond 1852; 142: 103-124. See p. 121. 18. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Sonkowsky R, Schwartzkopff O. A bibliography: toward a chrononoosphere (from Gk chronos = time, Attic Gk nous = mind and Gk sphairos = globe). World Forum "Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. http://2011 .geocataclysm.org/pdf/franz_halberg_220811 .pdf 138 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 19. Thiele ThN. De Macularum Solis antiquioribus quibusdam observationibus Hafniae institutis. Astronomische Nachrichten 1859; 50: 259-261. 20. Schwabe H. Sonnen-Beobachtungen im Jahre 1843. Astronomische Nachrichten 1844; 21: 254-256 (no. 495). 21. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Sothern RB, Czaplicki J, Schwartzkopff O. Thirty-five-year climatic cycle in heliogeophysics, psychophysiology, military politics, and economics. Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics 2010; 46 (7): 844-864. (Back-translation from Geophysical Processes and Biosphere 2009; 8 [2]: 13-42.) 22. Czaplicki J, Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Hillman D, Finley J, Thomas F, Kino T, Chrousos G. Different responses of blood pressure and heart rate to lunar and solar days during adynamic depression. World Forum „Natural Cataclysms and Global Problems of the Modern Civilization", 19-21 September, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey. London: SWB; 2011. p. 126. 23. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Grambsch P, McCraty R, Beaty L, Siegel ova J, Homolka P, Hillman DC, Finley J, Thomas F, Kino T, Revilla M, Schwartzkopff O. Personalized chronobiologic cybercare; other chronomics' progress by transdisciplinary cycles' congruences: Season's Appreciations 2009. JApplBiomed2011; 9: 1-34. DOI 10.2478M0136-009-0022-8. 24. Akasofu S-i. On the recovery from the Little Ice Age. Natural Sei 2010; 2: 1211-1224. 25. Friis-ChriStensen E, Lassen K. Length of the solar cycle: an indicator of solar activity closely associated with climate. Science 1991; 254: 698-700. 26. Egeson C. Egeson's weather system of sun-spot causality: being original researches in solar and terrestrial meteorology. Sydney: Turner & Henderson; 1889. 63 pp. 27. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Bernhardt K-H, Sampson M, Schwartzkopff O, Sonntag D. Egeson's (George's) transtridecadal weather cycling and sunspots. Hist Geo Space Sei 2010; 1: 49-61. 28. Brückner E. Klimaschwankungen seit 1700 nebst Beobachtungen über die Klimaschwankungen der Diluvialzeit. Wien und Olmütz: E. Holzel; 1890. 324 pp. (Penck A, Hrsg. Geographische Abhandlungen, Band IV.) 29. Lockyer WJS. The solar activity 1833-1900. Proc Roy Soc Lond 1901; 68: 285-300. 30. Lockyer N. Simultaneous solar and terrestrial changes. Science 1903; 18: 611-623. 31. Liznar J. Über die 33-jährige Periode der Sonnenflecken, Meteorologische Zeitschrift 1902; 19: 237-238. 32. Stehr N, von Storch H. (Eds.) (Stehr B, Gamlin G, trans). Eduard Brückner: the sources and consequences of climate change and climate variability in historical times. Dordrecht/Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers; 2000. 338 p. 33. Stehr N, von Storch H. Eduard Bruckner's ideas - relevant in his time and today. GKSS-Forschungszentrum Geesthacht GmbH, Geesthacht, XXXV and 393 pp, 2006. 34. Wu Z, Huang NE, Long SR, Peng CK. On the trend, detrending, and variability of nonlinear and nonstationary time series. PNAS 2007; 104: 14889-14894. 35. Hoyt DV, Schatten KH. The Role of the Sun in Climate Change. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1997. 279 pp. 36. Sigel F (Dreier W, Lerche D, Übers.; Goring H, Wissenschaftl. Red. der deutschsprachigen). Schuld ist die Sonne. Thun/Frankfurt am Main: Harri Deutsch; 1979. 215 pp. 37. Schuster A. On Newcomb 's method of investigating periodicities and its application to Bruckner's weather cycle. Proc Roy Soc Lond A 1914; 90: 349-355. 38. Kostin SI. Is the Brikner (Brueckner) cycle real? Directorate of Scientific Information Services Ottawa (Ontario), May 1965. 4 pp. http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?verb=getRecord&metadataPrefi x=html&identifier=AD0615768 139 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 39. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Czaplicki J, Prabhakaran Nayar SR, Siegelova J. Briickner-Egeson-Lockyer (BEL) climate cycle in original Bruckner's, Lockyer's and follow-up data. In: Halberg F, Kenner T, Fiser B, Siegelova J. (Eds.) Proceedings, Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, Brno, Czech Republic, October 4-7,2008. p. 74-89. http://web.fnusa.cz/files/kfdr2008/sbornik_2008.pdf 40. Cornelissen G, Prabhakaran Nayar SR, Czaplicki J, Siegelova J, MendozaB, Halberg F. Briickner-Egeson-Lockyer (BEL) cycle in heliogeomagnetics. In: Halberg F, Kenner T, Fiser B, Siegelova J. (Eds.) Proceedings, Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, Brno, Czech Republic, October 4-7, 2008. p. 106-115. http://web.fnusa.cz/files/kfdr2008/sbornik_2008.pdf 41. Sothern RB, Katinas GS, Fiser B, Siegelova J, Cornelissen G, Halberg F. A transtridecadal cycle in human heart rate: Selective infradian, notably multidecadal solar-physiologic BEL congruences. In: Halberg F, Kenner T, Fiser B, Siegelova J. (Eds.) Proceedings, Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, Brno, Czech Republic, October 4-7, 2008. p. 204-213. http://web.fnusa.cz/files/ kfdr2008/sbornik_2008.pdf 42. Chibisov SM (summarized by). Resolution concerning chronobiology and chronomics. Ill International Conference, Civilization diseases in the spirit of V.l. Vernadsky, People's Friendship University of Russia, Moscow, Oct. 10-12, 2005, p. 23-25. 43. Bartels J. Statistical studies of quasi-periodic variables: with illustrative examples from geophysics. Washington DC: Carnegie Institution of Washington; 1959. (Reprints of three papers from Terrestrial Magnetism and Atmospheric Electricity: Terrestrial magnetic activity and its relations to solar phenomena. Terr Mag Atmosph Electr 1932; 37: 1-52; Statistical methods for research on diurnal variations, Terr Mag Atmosph Electr 1932; 37: 291-302; Random fluctuations, persistence, and quasi-persistence in geophysical and cosmical periodicities. Terr Mag Atmosph Electr 1935; 40: 1-60.) 44. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Katinas G, Tvildiani L, Gigolashvili M, Janashia K, Toba T, Revilla M, Regal P, Sothern RB, Wendt HW, Wang ZR, Zeman M, Jozsa R, Singh RB, Mitsutake G, Chibisov SM, Lee J, Holley D, Holte JE, Sonkowsky RP, Schwartzkopff O, Delmore P, Otsuka K, Bakken EE, Czaplicki J, International BIOCOS Group. Chronobiology's progress: season's appreciations 2004-2005. Time-, frequency-, phase-, variable-, individual-, age- and site-specific chronomics. J Appl Biomed 2006; 4: 1-38. http://www.zsf.jcu.cz/vyzkum/jab/4_l/halberg.pdf 45. Khmelinskii I, StallingaP. Climate change policies for the XXIst century: mechanisms, predictions and recommendations, http://arXiv.org/abs/1105.5845 46. Otsuka K, Cornelissen G, Norboo T, Takasugi E, Halberg F. Chronomics and "glocal" (combined global and local) assessment of human life. Progress of Theoretical Physics 2008; Suppl. 173: 134-152. 47. Marquardt DW. An algorithm for least-squares estimation of nonlinear parameters. J Soc Indust Appl Math 1963; 11: 431-441. 48. Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Wendt HW, Bingham C, Sothern RB, Haus E, Kleitman E, Kleitman N, Revilla MA, Revilla M Jr, Breus TK, Pimenov K, Grigoriev AE, Mitish MD, Yatsyk GV, Syutkina EV. Resonance of about-weekly human heart rate rhythm with solar activity change. Biologia (Bratislava) 1996; 51: 749-756. Prof. Germaine Cornelissen, Dr. Vicedirector Halberg Chronobiology Center University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 8609 Integrative Biology and Physiology, Minneapolis Campus 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA 140 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 THE CHRONOMICS TRIAL: REPORT OF A 3-MONTH PILOT STUDY. Fabien De Meester1, Agnieszka Wilczyňska12, Ram B Singh13, Douglas W Wilson14, Daniel Pella5, Jan Fedačko5, Jarmila Siegelová6, Bohumil Fišer6'1', Claudio Galii7, Germaine Cornélissen8 & Franz Halberg8 ^simTsoum Institute, Ulica Golebia 2, 31-007 Kraków, Poland; institute of Psychology, University of Silesia, Ulica Grazynskiego 53, 40-126 Katowice, Poland; 3Halberg Hospital and Research Institute, IFTM University, Civil Lines, Moradabad-10, UP 244001, India; 4School of Medicine and Health, Queen's Campus, Durham University, Stockton-on-Tees, TS17 6BH, United Kingdom; 5Centre of Excellency for Atherosclerosis Research, Louis Pasteur University Hospital, Faculty of Medicine PJ Safarik University, Trieda SNP 1, 041 90 Kosice, Slovakia; department of Functional Diagnostics and Rehabilitation, Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, St. Anna Teaching Hospital, Pekařská 53, 656-91 Brno, Czech Republic; 7FAsTEST™Parco Tecnologico Padáno, Lodi, 26900, Italy & Department of Pharmacological Sciences, Laboratory of Lipid Pharmacology and Nutrition, University of Milan, Via Balzaretti 9, 20133 Milan, Italy; 8Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Mayo Hospital, Room 715, 733-5 (7th floor), Minneapolis Campus, Del Code 8609, 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, United States. Correspondence: Fabien De Meester, TsimTsoum Institute, Ulica Golebia 2, 31-007 Kraków, Poland. E-mail: fdm(g),tsimtsoum.net Abstract The Chronomics Trial is designed to test the evolutionary diet/tissue hypothesis (De Meester, 2009), i.e. that a return to the original balanced (1:1) ratio of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and/or to a corresponding 25% proportion of co6 highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs) in plasma/serum total lipids (co6:co3 PUFAs =1:1 and/or %co6 in HUFAs = 25) (www.columbus-concept.com) can possibly reduce the risk of developing chronic degenerative diseases to near zero at the population level. The longitudinal study is to be conducted in three different age groups of healthy subjects living in Southern Poland (adolescents, adults, elderly), with a focus on biomarkers and clinical/psychological symptoms of the development of cardiovascular and psychological diseases. This, herein reported, 3-month (3-m) pilot study was carried out on 5 family-related subjects + 4 family-acquainted subjects (external references) to test the protocol designed for the 4-y-long psychosomatic intervention trial involving 90 subjects, distributed evenly over 3 subgroups of 30 adolescents, 30 adults & 30 elderly. The pilot study has yielded results in terms of a potential for the alteration of tissue fatty acid composition (Omega-6 Status, Q6S, %co6-HUFAs in total blood fatty acids) back to its envisaged evolutionary standard {Columbus Hypothesis: co6:co3-PUFAs = 1:1 and/ or %co6-HUFAs = 25) in samples of a modern Western human population. The main observation was 141 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 that: (i) age & gender, (ii) body mass composition & index, and (iii) metabolic rate & lifestyle do not appear to substantially influence the: "AQ6S = -7.5 units/(g co-3 HUFA)/day" response of modern Western blood/tissue fatty acid composition - expressed here as the co-6 status (Q6S) or the proportion of co-6 fatty acids in total blood lipids HUFA - to co-3 HÚFA (PUR3) supplementation in the presence of an agent for reducing epigenetic-genomic effects (a "blunter") (LIPISTASE). Within the 3-m pilot study, all subjects in the adolescent & elderly subgroups on the 6 pills a day (~2.7g co-3 HUFA (PUR3)/day), in association with 2 tablets LIPISTASE/day, have had their Q6S reduced by some 20%, with no reduction in blood concentration of co-6 HUFA. In the adult group, the three individuals were on a ~1.0, 3.6 & 4.5g co-3 HUFA (PUR3)/day intervention program. They respectively had their Q6S decreased and/or stabilized at 67.5, 48.0 & 41.0%, thus confirming the generality of the blood/tissue titration method observed in the adolescent & elderly groups. All subjects reported subjective mind- and body-wise health improvements concerning cognition, concentration, communication, breathing, general feeling, relief of dizziness and pain. The first adult subject reported slight improvement in his annual episode of seasonal allergy whereas the next two reported feelings of "rejuvenation" in all senses. Medical, biochemical & socio-psychological analyses did confirm those self-assessed subjective improvements. In all three subgroups, prolonged co-3 HUFA (PUR3) intake appears to maintain the new status, not to further reduce it. The results of the 3-m Pilot Chronomics Study not only refine the size of the problem in terms of the daily intake of co-3 HUFA (PUR3) needed to reverse the Omega-6 Status (Q6S) from 75 to 50% (3.35g co-3 HUFA (PUR3)/day) and then eventually from 50 to 25% (3.35g co-3 HUFA(PUR3)/day) in the blood-tissue of a modern Western population, but also indicates benefit from promoting the approach and from doing so in the presence of a "blunter" (LIPISTASE) of inter-individual genotypic variance. A reduction in daily intake of omega-6 fatty acids from plant & animal origins could help a long way in reducing the currently determined daily intake of co-3 HUFA (PUR3) needed to continue with, and/or to maintain post-intervention, the evolutionary selected blood/tissue ratio. In this respect, foods responding to the Columbus Concept (Wild Foods for Health™; www.columbus-concept.com) appear to be acceptably designed. More generally, its small sample size notwithstanding, the efficacy if not the safety of the Chronomics Trial protocol seems satisfactory. Introduction The Columbus Concept (www.columbus-concept.com) emanates from a research project initiated in 1995 in a family-owned egg-processing company located in Belgium, in yet another 2nd world war sadly famous town, Bastogne, Ardennes Region (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mardasson_Memorial). The Battle of the Bulge has left the place with scares and opportunities for Humanity to progress. A pioneer in Egg Science & Technology, the family company surely consisted of two generations of the De Meester family. Eventually, the brands remain: Belovo, Columbus, OvoLife, BNLfood (www bnlfood.com). For those who still think or believe that non-essential nutrients - such as cholesterol, saturated & mono-unsaturated fats, glucose and carbohydrates, and the like, accounting for the bulk (-90%) of the daily energy intake - are primary risk factors in diet-ill health relationships, the best advice to convey probably resides in: "keep reading, evaluating, questioning, arguing, disputing facts commonly 142 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 regarded as established". As someone once said, "I cannot teach you anything, I can only help you think". Good points to start from that refreshed perspective are the long-standing, well-documented, evidence-based, unbiased scientific open access site maintained by Uffe Ravnskov (www.ravnskov. nu/uffe) and the more recent yet similarly scholarly blog developed by Michel de Lorgeril (http:// michel. delorgeril. info/). It is Artemis Simopoulos who once inspired nutritionists to take a new look at human nutrition, pointing out the evolutionary fact that Homo sapiens' genetic pattern evolved on a diet that was basically balanced in essential fats (Omega-6/3 ~ 1). Michael Crawford came on postulating the hypothesis from an earlier observation that free-roaming non-domesticated animals in the African Savannah keep responding to the same evolutionary principle, namely that in the original diet Omega 6 and Omega 3 fatty acids were equally represented. Such a basic consideration may prevent obesity. Donald McNamara established the fact that dietary and blood cholesterol were not related to CVD and Harumi Okuyama concluded on saturated fats being a non-issue unless associated with modern plant/animal fats exceedingly rich in omega-6 fatty acids. William Lands developed mathematical models to predict risk of death from CHD based on population-based observational data related to total blood proportion of omega-6 highly unsaturated fatty acids (omega-6 status) and Jing Kang engineered fat-1 mice to show that tissues naturally tend in their constant search for homeostasis to balance omega-6/3 fatty acid composition in cell membranes. Claudio Galli developed a reliable bench methodology for fatty acid analyses of blood collected from fingertips whereupon William Harris & Clemens von Schacky went on deriving a complementary clinical approach (omega-3 index) based on fatty acid analyses in red blood cells. The Columbus Concept (De Meester, 2009) was born, by which it is hypothesized that the most single common roots of all chronic degenerative diseases causing 85% of all deaths world wide is an eicosanoid-derived uncontrolled inflammatory process at tissue level, "The Tissue is The Issue", and that a return to the original balanced (1:1) ratio of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and/or to a corresponding 25% proportion of co6 highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs) in plasma/serum total lipids (co6:co3 PUFAs =1:1 and/or %co6 in HUFAs = 25) can possibly reduce the risk of developing chronic degenerative diseases to near zero at population level. The Chronomics Trial will test-validate the evolutionary diet/tissue hypothesis from a broadened psycho-somatic approach recognizing the importance of the mind stress —► body strain response in the biological cascade leading to tissue injury, which if not taken care of at the level of cell membrane fatty acids eventually transform into chronic inflammation and the inception of non-communicable diseases (fig. 1). The sympatho-vagal balance and vascular rhythms of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation are promising tools to solve the long disputed psychosomatic gap. Especially sympatho-vagal balance obtained from beat-to-beat monitoring on task-force monitors and circadian (daily) rhythms obtained from 7/24 continuous monitoring of SBP, DBP and HR appear to accurately and reliably probe mind stress-induced body strain. Circadian Vascular Variability Disorders (VVDs) are also established independent risk factors (reliable predictors) of cardiovascular diseases. Circaseptan (weekly) rhythms have a strong social component that may also reflect mind stress-related body strain. In the Chronomics Trial, circadian, circaseptan and other infradian vascular rhythms and disorders will be studied from a socio-psychological perspective with the aim of capturing the physiological determinants of currently and widely used socio-psychological tests, with the far-reaching contemplated objective of developing a new era of evidence-based socio-psychology. The Chronomics Pilot Study carried out over the last 6 months of 2010 provides tangible evidence that such relationship does exist. The 3-month pilot study reported here was aimed at sizing the challenge and testing the feasibility and safety of returning blood/tissue omega-6 status from current 75% to contemplated 25% in a subgroup (a family extending over 3 generations, fig.2) of the Silesian Polish Society, as well as at 143 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 assessing new sets of psychosomatic markers (vascular variabilities of blood pressure & heart rate) and symptoms (sympatho-vagal balance of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation) for systematic follow-up along the contemplated Chronomics Trial (fig.3). The protocol of the Chronomics Trial is financially supported by the TsimTsoum Institute (www.tsimtsoum.net); it was initially submitted for granting to the EU Commission under FP7-Health-2010 (FP7-259825-1; OCT 29, 2009) and then to the Polish NCN (Narodowego Centrum Nauki) under NZ5_9: Prevention of Human Diseases (2011/01/B/NZ5/01369; JUN 20, 2011). Materials & Methods SUPPLEMENTS: (i) PUR3 (BioSeutica USA, Inc, 6369 Mill Street, Suite 202, Rhinebeck NY 12572, USA; www.bioseutica.com): min 90% lc-omega-3 fatty acid ethyl ester, min 40% EPA, min 15%DHA, mixed tocopherols 0.15-0.25%, pesticides max 1 mg/kg, dioxinemax 1.5pgTeq/g, heavy metals max 0.1 mg/kg each (Cd, Hg, Pb), Anisidine Value max 20, peroxide value max 10 meq/kg, acid value max 2mg KOH/g. Coating: Gelatin 160 Bloom, Glycerol 85%, Sorbitol-Lsg 70%. One pill: 500 mg; (ii) LIPISTASE (Exichol SA, Bioresearch, Biopole, Corniche Str. 4, 1066 Epalinges, Switzerland; www.exichol.com): containing a combination of micronutrients - essential fatty acids, minerals & vitamins, yeast-fungi-land & marine plant extracts - involved in lipid metabolism (El Kochairi et al., 2011), destined to blunt epigenetic/genomic variabilities vs lipid metabolism. List of ingredients - all ingredients present at less than 1 meg (microgram) per pill. Scientific Name English Translation Source Oleum Brassica napus oleifera Canola (Rapeseed) Oil Grain Oleum Olea Olive Oil Fruit Oleum Vitis vinifera Grapeseed Oil Fruit Oleum Oenothera biennis Primrose Oil Grain Cocos nucifera Coprah Fruit Crithmum maritimum Marine Criste Flower Allium sativum Garlic Flower Vitis vinifera Vine Fruit Fucus vesiculosus Sea wrack Algua Palmaria palmata Sea weed Algua Chondrus crispus Irish Moss Algua Lentinus edodes Shiitake (mycelium) Fungi Supplementation was recommended to follow individual eating habits: two pills three times a day PUR3 at breakfast, lunch and dinner, and one pill two times a day LIPISTASE at breakfast and dinner. Monthly fingertip samplings were taken with no consideration of fasting and timing. METHODS & INSTRUMENTS: (i) body mass composition (table 1): Maltron Body Composition Analyser BF-907, Maltron International Ltd, PO Box 15, Rayleigh, Essex SS6 9SN, United Kingdom (www.maltronint.com). Bioelectrical impedance analysis is a rapid, non-invasive and low cost method for measuring body fat and body water; (ii) general medical assessment (table 2): standard routine blood & urine analyses performed at local public laboratories; (iii) psychological health (table 3): polish version of the Eysenck's Personality Questionnaire EPQ-R (Eysenck et al., 1985; Brzozowski & Drwal, 1995). The EPQ-R has 4 subscales: Neuroticism, Extroversion, Psychoticism and a scale which measures social approval, also known as the lie scale. The EPQ-R consists of 100 questions. 144 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 The subject has to decide if the items describe him or if they don't (YES or NO); (iv) parameter of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation (table 4) & hemodynamic parameters (table 7): Task Force Monitor, CNSystemsMedizintechnikAG, ReininghausstraBe 13, 8020 Graz, Austria(www.cnsystems. at); (v) circadian amplitudes of blood pressures & heart rate (table 5): TM-2430 Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitor, A&D Co, Ltd, 3-23-14, Higashi-Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo 170-0013 Japan (www.aandd.co.jp). equipped with standard TM-2430-06A adult left-arm cuff, recorder, casing & belt, 3 AAbatteries. Once a month 350 records of SBP, DPB, FIR at 30 min intervals around the clock (7-10 days). Doctor Pro3 Application Software with data communication cable AX-KO3057-200 for Windows PC (2000 Professional, XP Professional / Home Edition, Vista). Sphygmochron (Halberg Chronobiological Center (Minneapolis, MN, USA), one time-structure profile containing detailed analysis & interpretation of 7/24 stacked recorded data (http://www.msi.umn.edu/~halberg/); (vi) endothelial function & arterial stiffness (table 6): Endo-PAT2000, Itamar Medical Ltd, 9 Halamish St, PO Box 3579, Caesaria 38900, Israel (www.itamar-medical.com). Peripheral arterial tone (PAT) is a rapid, non-invasive and low cost method for measuring endothelium-mediated changes in vascular tone; (vii) blood fatty acid profiles (tables 8a,b,c): Fluka #11312 Blood Collection Kit, Sigma-Aldrich Co, 3050 Spruce St., St. Louis, MO 63103, United States (www.sigmaaldrich.com). containing 100 dipstick matchboxes, antioxidant BHT-solution, dessicant packs, foil barrier ziplock bags. FAsTEST SRL, Viale Tunisia, 38, 20124 Milano, Italy (www.fastest.it) with detailed analysis & interpretation of total blood lipids fatty acids distribution. The omega-6 status (Q6S), denned as the proportion of omega-6 in total blood highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFA) was used to index pre-supplementation vs post-supplementation fatty acid composition. Results Characterization of subjects The five family-related subjects were the mother B2 (1966), her two m/ftwin children Al & A3 (1993) and her two parents CI (1938) and C3 (1939). Each age group included external references with no family connection, i.e. one female adolescent A2 of similar age (1992) as the two family children, two adults respectively older B3 (1961) and younger (1984) then the family mother, and one elderly older C2 (1933) than the two family grand parents (fig. 1). The nine subjects received ample oral and written information about the scope of the study and voluntarily signed a formal agreement on the day of initiation of the study, i.e. Aug 15, 2010. Consents of parents were requested and obtained on the same day for the three children (< 18 years of age) enrolled. Analyses of Body Mass Composition did not identify any obesity-related risks within the group. Most values were within norms notwithstanding obvious differences in lifestyle and body fat between and across age groups (tab.l). The two sportive twin children Al & A3 differed from each other body-wise, in size (height: 158 & 184 cm, weight: 53 & 77.5 kg), composition (fat: 17.9 & 9.7%, water: 60.0 & 66.1%) and resting metabolic rate (RMR: 1417 & 2076 kcal); their mother B2 was intermediate in size (height: 175 cm, weight: 60 kg) and exhibited normal age-related changes in body composition (fat: 20.5%, water: 58.2%) and resting metabolic rate (RMR: 1375 kcal). The two grand parents CI & C3 (height: 168 & 175 cm, weight: 70 & 82 kg) presented similarly normal values for their age, in body composition (fat: 34.0 & 18.8%, water: 48.3 & 59.5%) and resting metabolic rate (RMR: 1221 & 1615 kcal). With the external references, the ranges of body variables extended broadly as follows: age (17 to 77 yr), height (158 to 190 cm), weight (51 to 82 kg), body fat (4 to 34%), body water (48.3 to 70.3%), BMI (19.6 to 26.8), RMR (1124 to 2076 kcal), TDE (1163 to 3013 kcal). 145 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab.l. Body Mass Composition: Oct 10. 2010 (2/3"» of study). Al A2 A3 Bl B2 B3 Cl C2 C3 Age (yr) 17 18 17 49 44 26 72 77 72 Height (cm) 158 160 184 190 175 185 168 158 175 Weight (kg) 53 51 77.5 80 60 82 70 60 82 Weight R (kg) 51-56 50-58 78-85 88-97 60-70 78-90 59-70 51-61 78-86 Body Fat (%) 17.9 19.0 9.7 4.0 20.5 16.3 34.0 33.3 18.8 Body Fat R (%) 16-22 23-29 12-18 15-21 26-32 18-24 28-34 28-34 17-23 Water (%) 60.0 59.2 66.1 70.3 58.2 61.2 48.3 48.8 59.5 Water R (%) 55-62 50-57 58-65 55-62 47-54 54-61 45-52 45-52 53-60 BMI 21.2 19.9 22.9 22.2 19.6 24.0 24.8 24.0 26.8 RMR (kcal) 1417 1388 2076 2007 1375 2000 1221 1124 1615 ADE (kcal) 482 272 937 937 482 885 91 39 984 TDE (kcal) 1899 1660 3013 2944 1857 2885 1312 1163 2599 A: Active; N: Normal; S: Sportive; BMI: Body Mass Index; RMR: Resting Metabolie Rate; ADE: Average Daily Energy; TDE: Total Daily Energy. General Medical Assessments of the subjects (blood: Tab.2a & urine: Tab.2b) were performed upon completion of the study (B3 was not available). Most parameters were within norms or borderline except for a number of medically relevant items as follows: (i) blood sedimentation rates were exceeding norms in Bl (16 mm/hr), B2 (14 mm/hr), even more so in CI (39 mm/hr); (ii) hematocrytes were low in B1; (iii) MCV was low in A3; (iv) Glucose was high in C3 (medically treated for type-2 diabetes); (v) potassium & sodium were on the high side in A2 & Al, respectively; (vi) calcium was abnormally high in the elderly group C (2.35 to 2.55 mmol/1); (vii) fibrinogen was a bit low in Al; (viii) creatinin was on the low side in Bl; (ix) vitamins 25-OH D3 & B12 were high or above norms in the multi-vitamins & minerals supplemented subgroup Al, A3, Bl & B2; (x) triglycerides were low in both A3 & Bl; (xi) HDL & TC were exceeding norms in Bl, and (xii) total cholesterol was above norms in Bl, CI & C3. In urine analyses, a neutral pH was found in B2 and traces of protein were detected in A2. Tab.2a. General Medical Assessment - Blood: Jan-Feb 2011 (completion of study) Blood Norms Units Al A2 A3 Bl B2 CI C2 C3 Type/Formula (i) A+ B+ A- A+ 0+ nd nd nd Sedimentation (ii) mm/hr 5 3 1 16* 14* 39* 11 4 Hematocrytes (iii) % 36.3 35.3 41.2 39.6* 38.2 43.0 41.2 nd Hemoglobin (iv) S% 12.4 12.4 14.8 14.2 13.3 13.8 14.2 nd Red cells (v) 10E6/mm3 4.12 4.08 5.22 4.57 4.63 5.01 4.51 nd White cells (vi) 10E3/mm3 4.0 9.1 5.4 6.0 5.4 7.6 8.0 nd MCV (vii) urn3 88.8 86.5 78.9* 86.7 82.5 85.0 91.4 nd MCH (viii) PS 30.1 30.4 28.4 31.1 28.7 28.0 31.6 nd MCHC (ix) % 33.9 35.1 35.9 35.9 34.8 32.0 34.5 nd Thrombocytes (x) 10E3/mm3 236 311 253 173 260 244 298 nd Index Anizo (xi) % 13.2 13.2 12.6 12.4 13.3 13.9 13.0 nd Glucose (xii) mg/dl 87 92 84 94 nd 87 109 133* 146 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Uric acid (xiii) mg/dl 3.6 4.3 4.7 3.8 2.5 5.3 4.0 nd Bilirubin total (xiv) mg/dl 0.51 0.45 0.60 0.72 0.44 0.50 0.50 nd Ferritin (XV) ng/ml 19 54 45 184 21 55 112 271 Magnesium (xvi) mg/dl 2.1 1.8 1.7 2.1 2.2 1.9 1.9 2.1 Potassium (xvii) mmol/1 4.5 5.2* 5.1 4.6 4.9 4.75 4.3 4.24 Sodium (xviii) mmol/1 147* 142 141 142 142 139 138 137 Calcium (xix) mmol/1 1.14 1.18 1.08 1.10 1.11 2.35* 2.25* 2.55* Fibrinogen (XX) 8/1 1.89* 2.29 2.33 3.32 2.94 3.91 2.77 2.65 Creatinin (xxi) mg/dl 0.66 0.79 0.85 0.69* 0.81 1.15 0.88 nd 25-OH D3 (xxii) ng/dl 41.1* 24.0 42.7* 41.1* 36.1* nd nd nd B12 (xxiii) PS/dl 471 456 754 975* 714* 438 340 399 CRP (xxiv) none nd nd A A nd nd nd nd Triglycerides (xxv) mg/dl nd nd 56* 40* nd 91 nd 101 Cholesterol LDL (xxvi) mg/dl nd nd 125 133 nd 141 nd 142 Cholesterol HDL (xxvii) mg/dl nd nd 60.1 77.3* nd 43.0 nd 60.0 Cholesterol Tot (xxviii) mg/dl nd nd 196 218* nd 202* nd 222* Prolactin (xxix) ng/dl nd 28.2 nd nd nd nd nd nd (*)Out of norms, as follows: (i) None; (ii) M:l-8; F:l-12, (iii) M:45-52; F:38-48; C:35-43, (iv) M:14-16.6; F:12-15; C:10.9-15, (v) M:4.3-5.9; F:3.9-5.5; C:3.8-5.5, (vi) M&F:4-10; C:5-17, (vii) 82-94, (viii) 28-32, (ix) 32-36, (x) 150-400, (xi) 11.5-14.5, (xii) 75-115, (xiii) M:3.0-7.0; F:2.5-6.0, (xiv) 0.2-1.0, (xv) M:30-400; F:13-150, (xvi) 1.60-2.55, (xvii) 3.5-5.1, (xviii) 136-145, (xix) 1.0-1.3, (xx) 2.0-4.0, (xxi)M:0.7-1.4,F:0.6-1.3, (xxii) 20-32; (xxiii) M: 174-878; F: 191-663; (xxiv) Absent A, (xxv) M:60-115, F:40-140, (xxvi) <135, (xxvii) M:30-70; F:30-85, (xxviii) 140-200, (xxix) M:3-25; F:5-3 5. Tab.2b. General Medical Assessment - Urine: Jan-Feb 2011 (completion of study) Urine Norms Units Al A2 A3 BI B2 Cl C2 C3 Color (xxx) None Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y pH (xxxi) None H H H H H/O* H H H Density (xxxii) 8/1 1030 1030 1026 1028 1014 1008 1020 1008 Protein (xxxiii) None A j* A A A A A A Sugar (xxxiv) None A A A A A A A A Urobilinogen (xxxv) Unspecified N N N N N N N N Ketonic bodies (xxxvi) None A A A A A A A A Red cells (xxxvii) wpw 0-1 0 0 0 0 0-1 nd nd White cells (xxxviii) wpw 1-2 8-10 0-1 0-2 1-2 3-5 2-6 0-1 (*)Out of norms, as follows: (xxx) Yellow, (xxxi) Acidic, (xxxii) 1005-1030, (xxxiii) Absent A, (xxxiv) Absent A, (xxxv) not specified - within norms N, (xxxvi) Absent A, (xxxvii) <5, (xxxviii) <10. YYellow, H:Acid, H/0:Neutral, T:Traces. General Health Questionnaires (GHQ12 & 28) revealed no anomalies within the group, with all subjects but the adolescents scoring at 0 on both scales except for Bl scoring at 1 in the GHQ28 test. Adolescents (Al, A2, A3) scored 1 & 5, 0 & 11, 3 & 2 in GHQ12 & 28 tests, respectively. Eysenck 147 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Personality Questionnaire - Revised (EPQ-R) revealed a relatively heterogeneous distribution of psychological traits within the group, except for the two grand parents CI & C3 (tab.3). Tab.3. Eysenck Personality Questionnaire - Revised (EPQ-R) Al A2 A3 Bl B2 B3 CI C2 C3 Neurotici sm 5 9 4 2 1 3 5 4 3 Extroversion 8 4 9 1 4 8 5 8 6 Psychoticism 7 3 3 8 6 4 5 3 6 Lie Scale 1 8 6 10 1 2 6 5 7 1-10 sten scales The parameters of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation obtained on the Task Force Monitor (St Anna Hospital, Brno) under conditions of spontaneous Ol and controlled 02 (0.33 Hz) breathing (tab.4) led to the general observation that subjects appear not to fit norms to various extents with, as general trends across all variables, Al, A3, B2, C3 in opposite direction to Bl & CI (save perhaps for Bl under controlled breathing); (i) in the range of low frequency (LF) and of low-to-high frequency ratio (LF/HF) of heart rate variability (HRV), power spectral density (PSD), and Sympatho-Vagal Balance (SVB), Al, A3, B2 & C3 are clearly down expected range, whereas Bl & CI are clearly up; (ii) in the high frequency range of HRV, all subjects but CI were clearly under norms, with C3 extremely so, which renders the two elderly grand-parents opposite extremes on that specific variable. Tab.4. Parameters of the Autonomic Cardiovascular Regulation (ACR): Nov 4. 2010 (end of study). Parameter Abbr. Unit Norms 0 Al A3 Bl B2 Cl C3 Baroreflex Sensitivity BRS ms/ mmHg >9.3 1 10.0 15.0 33.2 7.3 36.8 6.4 2 28.3 10.0 11.7 12.2 42.9 2.5 Heart Rate Variability (LF) LF-RRI ms2 >750 <1590 1 147 479 4269 84 3964 7.0 2 68 114 329 104 3986 4.0 Heart Rate Variability (HF) HF-RRI ms2 >775 <1175 1 344 405 467 232 1390 25.0 2 930 153 178 110 1790 19.0 Power Spectral Density PSD-RRI ms2 >2400 <4600 1 567 945 5070 385 5527 38 2 1060 330 573 257 6167 34 LF/HF Ratio LF/HF-RRI * <2.0 1 0.4 2.3 9.7 0.5 4.7 0.2 2 0.1 0.8 1.7 1.5 2.6 0.2 Sympatho-Vagal Balance LFnu-dBP/ HFnu-RRI * <2.0 1 0.3 0.9 3.7 0.8 2.7 0.2 2 0.2 0.9 1.7 1.3 2.6 0.3 01: Spontaneous breathing: 02: 0.33 Hz breathing (Metronome "Rizene Dychani"); LF: 0.04-0.15 Hz; HF: 0.15-0.40 Hz. A2, B3 & C2 were not available on the day of the study. Vascular rhythms (SBP, DBP, HR) monitored ambulatory around the clock on each enrolled subject revealed individual characteristics and their month-to-month fluctuations in terms of circadian amplitudes (tab.5). Average values reveal circadian hyper-amplitude (CHAT) of SBP (>100%) in B3, very high amplitudes (80-100%) in Al, B2, Cl, C2, high amplitudes in A2 & A3 (60-80%), and medium amplitudes in Bl & C3 (40-60%). The trends were similar though not exactly identical and 148 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 of lower intensities in DBP; no CHAT or very high amplitudes were identified; high (60-80%) and medium (40-60%) amplitudes were observed in A1,A2, B2,B3, CI andA3,Bl, C2, C3, respectively. In terms of HR circadian variability, all subjects had medium values (40-60%), expect A3 (36%), B2 (26%) & B2 (72%). Tab.5. Circadian Amplitudes of SBP. DBP & HR Al A2 A3 Bl B2 B3 CI C2 C3 Month SBP 92 44 84 41/43 78/95 113 46 98 65 1 92 71 63 49/49/51 75/113 101 105 93 44 2 67 84 36 59/62/56 109/61 92 85 79 28 3 Aver. 84 66 61 51 88 102 79 90 46 DBP 82 52 65 41/42 65/78 88 55 57 56 1 75 82 50 42/48/51 56/97 45 81 60 41 2 59 80 28 56/56/47 72/47 81 62 59 29 3 Aver. 72 71 48 48 69 71 66 59 42 HR 76 45 45 43/27 32/14 81 43 33 47 1 34 42 39 43/51/59 30/40 74 38 49 50 2 51 37 24 37/37/41 18/20 62 47 47 58 3 Aver. 54 41 36 42 26 72 43 43 52 SBP: Systolic Blood Pressure; DBP: Diastolic Blood Pressure; HR: Heart Rate; Month 1: Aug/Sep; Month 2: Sep/Oct; Month 3: Oct/Nov. Amplitudes are expressed in % and are defined as the double amplitude of the circadian rhythms in blood pressure (SBP & DBP) and heart rate (HR), respectively, relative to those of reference limits (min/max) of healthy peers (95% CI). Bl & B2 were monitored continuously during the lifespan of study as well as before and after, which explains the additional information sourced from those two subjects. Acircaseptan component was detected with statistical significance (P<0.05) in 20 of the 36 profiles for SBP and in 14 cases for DBP. A circasemiseptan component was detected in 15 and 17 of the SBP and DBP profiles, respectively. Overall, the circadian component was the most prominent in the spectrum (P<0.001), accounting for 26% (SBP) and 20% (DBP) of the variance. Several harmonic terms contributed significantly to the circadian waveform. The 12-hour component accounts for 5% (SBP) and 4% (DBP) of the overall variance (P<0.001) and the 6-hour component accounts for 1.5% of the variance (P<0.001). An about 3.4-hour component that may correspond to the REM cycle is also detected for DBP (P=0.049). As expected, circaseptan-to-circadian and circasemi septan-to-circadian amplitude ratios showed a concave relation with age, with a trough in mid-adulthood. The fit of a second-order polynomial of the circasemiseptan-to-circadian amplitude ratio versus age reached borderline statistical significance in the case of SBP (R2=0.141, P=0.081; on log10 amplitude ratios: R2=0.159, P=0.058). Endothelial function (Reactive Hyperemic Response or RHI) and arterial stiffness (Augmentation Index or AI @ 75 bpm) were assessed with the Endo-PAT 2000 (Safaric Hospital, Kosice) (tab. 6). The first endothelium-related parameter or endoscore (RHI) identified an anomaly (1.38) in A3, but this was later relieved as the adolescent admitted having wolfed on a fairly large amount of ice cream right before the test (a accompanying friend AO did show a similar though less dramatic deviation: RHI: 1.61, HR (bpm): 65, AI (%): -10; rAI(%): 78; a minor defect in endothelium function (1.48) 149 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 was detected in the eldest person C2. The second endothelium-related parameter (rAI) was much more scattered among individuals & subgroups; it ranged from 7 to 94% in the adolescent group A. Tab.6. Endothelial Function & Arterial Stiffness Norm Al A2 A3 Bl B2 B3 CI C2 C3 RHI >1.67 1.99 2.26 1.38* 2.38 2.90 3.67 2.08 1.48* 2.01 HR - 68 71 69 69 65 67 50 81 67 AI (%) - -31 +3 -11 -7 +13 -19 +22 +14 +28 rAI(%) 5-95 7 94 75 33 58 26 45 23 75 (*)Out of norms; RHI: Reactive Hyperemic Response or Endoscore; AI: Augmentation Index @ 75 bpm, rAI: Patient-relative to Age & Gender Matched Distribution Augmentation Index @ 75 bpm. The hemodynamic parameters obtained on the Task Force Monitor (St Anna Hospital, Brno) under conditions of spontaneous Ol and controlled 02 (0.33 Hz) breathing did not differ from each other and therefore only those under conditions of spontaneous Ol breathing are reported (tab.7). One elderly - the grandmother CI - displayed rather low heart rate (confirmed by ABPM). More remarkably were cardiac, stroke and peripheral resistance indexes at the lower and higher limits, respectively, or outside those norms for both the adults & the elderly subgroups taken to Brno. Tab.7. Hemodynamic Parameters Nov 4. 2010 (end of study). Parameter Abbr. Unit Norms AI A3 Bl B2 Cl C3 Heart Rate HR bpm 60-90 69.0 73.3 72.9 65.7 56.4* 72.5 Cont. Systolic Blood Pressure sBP mmHg 90-140 98.0 125.3 119.9 114.5 122.2 129.3 Cont. Diastolic Blood Pressure dBP mmHg 50-90 52.5 66.9 84.9 73.8 72.8 81.0 Sroke Index SI ml/m2 30-80 48.8 49.4 31.6 32.6 43.1 28.1* Cardiac Index CI l/min* m2 2.5-4.5 3.4 3.6 2.3* 2.1* 2.4* 2.0* Tot Peripheral Resistance Index TPRI dyne*s* m2/cm5 >1200 <2400 1536 1833 3332* 3020* 2674* 3509* Left Ventricular Index LFWI mmHg*l/ min*m2 3.0-5.0 2.9* 4.1 2.9* 2.4* 2.7* 2.5* (*)Out of norms. The monthly changes in total blood fatty acid profiles over the 3-months of dietary supplementation (PUR3 & Lipistase) - from AUG 15 to NOV 15, 2010 - are reported in table 8a (adolescents), table 8b (adults) and table 8c (elderly). Saturated fatty acids (SAFA), mono-unsaturated fatty acids (MUFA), polyunsaturated fatty acids (co6 & co3 PUFA) and, within the latter family, highly unsaturated fatty acids (co6 & co3 HUFA) were individually assessed. The C20:4co6 (AA) / C20:5co3 (EPA) ratio and the co6 HUFA/ (co6 + co3 HUFA) or omega-6 status (Q6S) were then computed. A common characteristic to all three groups and subjects was that the total blood fatty acid distributions reported here, from 150 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 36 analyses performed with no consideration of fasting and timing on nine subjects distributed over three generations (adolescents, adults, elderly) supplemented over three months with reasonably large amounts (2.7 to 5.4 g/d) of co3 HUFA, show relatively stable patterns of saturated (SAFA: 40-45%), monounsaturated (MUFA: 20-25%), and polyunsaturated (PUFA: 30-35%) fatty acids. Common trends to adolescent (A) and elderly (C) groups (tables 8a & 8c): the 6 subjects were clearly different at baseline with A A/EPA & Q6S ranging from 4.06 & 59.25 (Al) to 6.22 & 68.90 (C2) to 6.35 & 64.27 (A3) to 10.04 & 72.12 (C3) to 11.44 & 72.94 (cl) to 21.86 & 79.69 (A2), yet ended up the intervention program (6x PUR3/d + 2x LIPISTASE/d) with similar results, i.e. A A/EPA & Q6S of ~ 2.70 & ~ 55.0. These results were reached after just one month intervention for Al (best starting case scenario), no more than two months for A2 (worst starting case scenario), and three months for A3 (least compliant scenario). The elderly responded similarly though more intensively than adolescents to the treatment, with a sharp response in the first month followed by a clear trend to stabilization over the duration of the intervention. In terms of concurrent changes in fatty acids, all subjects did show an increase in co3 HUFA (C20:5 + C22:5 + C22:6) at the main expenses of SAFA, with no influence on co6 HUFA(C20:4 + C22:4 + C22:5). Independently of those diet-induced changes, HUFA contributed ~ 2% more to the relative composition of blood total fatty acids in the adolescents vs. the elderly. Adult group B (table 8): the adults maintained relatively constant blood fatty acid composition (AA/ EPA& Q6S) during the entire duration of the intervention, i.e. 1.35 & 42.00 (Bl), 1.78 & 47.45 (B2), 7.47 & 68.50 (B3). However, Bl & B2 did so through remarkable parallel increases in co6 and co3 HUFA probably due to a shift towards a higher protein/carbohydrate diet and/or additional dietary supplementation (CLA) at the time of the intervention1, whereas B3 achieved it as a result of keeping on a similar diet and level of supplementation, i.e. 0.9 g/d co3 HUFA or 2x PUR3/d, as he had been following prior to entering the reported pilot study. 1 Between AUG and OCT 2010, Bl adjusted his daily supplementation program from previous "3.9g co3 HUFA + lg CLA" to "5.4g co3 HUFA + 2g CLA" whilst B2 refined it from "2.6g co3 HUFA + lg CLA" to "3.6g co3 HUFA + 2g CLA". 151 Tab 8a. Adolescent group A: total blood fatty acid changes over 3-month intervention 52 O CZ) H X o a o r O S Al A2 A3 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 17-Oct-10 15-Nov-10 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 21-Oct-10 15-Nov-10 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 17-Oct-10 15-Nov-10 SAFA 45.70 43.49 42.45 41.84 44.59 44.08 40.34 42.36 46.53 47.33 41.20 42.49 C16:0 26.24 25.15 25.43 24.09 26.64 25.79 24.11 24.84 26.42 25.81 23.41 24.34 C18:0 13.62 13.38 12.70 13.47 12.73 13.46 11.94 12.97 14.29 15.16 13.08 13.42 C20:0 0.64 0.53 0.48 0.44 0.55 0.54 0.47 0.51 0.52 0.56 0.41 0.42 C22:0 2.19 1.79 1.45 1.45 1.97 1.78 1.40 1.51 2.04 2.31 1.52 1.48 C24:0 3.00 2.63 2.39 2.39 2.72 2.51 2.43 2.53 3.27 3.48 2.78 2.84 MUFA 22.18 20.71 22.92 21.23 24.16 23.92 22.76 23.21 23.92 21.96 22.47 23.52 C16 1 0.78 0.62 0.91 0.70 1.22 0.95 1.09 0.89 0.97 0.63 0.68 0.68 C18 lco7 1.55 1.34 1.54 1.43 1.56 1.54 1.57 1.74 1.63 1.48 1.48 1.63 C18 lco9 16.11 15.26 17.33 16.20 17.43 17.91 16.32 16.68 17.62 16.09 16.96 17.75 C20 1 0.30 0.21 0.14 0.21 0.26 0.24 0.16 0.21 0.28 0.27 0.15 0.26 C22 1 0.16 0.11 0.09 0.10 0.16 0.15 0.11 0.12 0.11 0.15 0.11 0.10 C24 1 3.29 3.16 2.91 2.60 3.53 3.12 3.52 3.58 3.30 3.34 3.09 3.11 PUFA 32.12 35.65 34.46 36.79 31.05 31.85 36.77 34.43 29.38 30.55 36.15 33.86 HUFA 14.33 16.00 16.24 17.02 13.04 13.30 19.40 16.14 13.12 14.23 17.02 17.21 C06PUFA 25.91 28.03 27.18 28.34 28.30 27.28 27.95 27.14 24.48 24.69 28.19 25.23 co 6 HUFA 8.49 8.70 9.17 8.90 10.39 9.10 10.84 9.25 8.43 8.72 9.40 9.23 C18:2 17.24 19.17 17.84 19.30 17.70 18.02 16.98 17.73 15.89 15.80 18.62 15.87 C18:3 0.17 0.15 0.17 0.14 0.20 0.15 0.13 0.15 0.16 0.16 0.17 0.13 C20:3 0.65 0.64 0.72 0.62 0.86 0.60 0.61 0.57 0.83 0.75 0.76 0.66 C20:4 7.07 7.33 7.89 7.71 8.09 7.35 9.16 7.81 6.68 7.09 7.76 7.73 C22:4 0.66 0.54 0.49 0.45 1.25 0.97 0.92 0.76 0.77 0.78 0.73 0.71 C22:5 0.11 0.19 0.07 0.12 0.19 0.18 0.15 0.12 0.15 0.10 0.15 0.13 co3 PUFA 6.15 7.71 7.40 8.53 2.87 4.65 8.89 7.25 5.01 5.97 8.06 8.71 co 3 HUFA 5.84 7.30 7.07 8.12 2.65 4.20 8.56 6.89 4.69 5.51 7.62 7.98 C18:3 0.30 0.41 0.32 0.41 0.22 0.45 0.34 0.35 0.33 0.45 0.44 0.73 C20:5 1.74 2.79 2.67 3.53 0.37 1.39 3.64 2.89 1.05 1.69 2.59 2.88 C22:5 1.07 1.34 1.26 1.33 0.80 0.94 1.56 1.31 1.08 1.17 1.55 1.54 C22:6 3.03 3.17 3.15 3.27 1.48 1.87 3.36 2.69 2.56 2.65 3.49 3.56 AA/EPA 4.06 2.63 2.96 2.18 21.86 5.28 2.52 2.70 6.35 4.20 3.00 2.68 Í16S 59.25 54.36 56.46 52.29 79.69 68.41 55.88 57.29 64.27 61.26 55.23 53.63 Tab 8b. Adult group B: total blood fatty acid changes over 3-month intervention Bl B2 B3 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 15-Nov-10 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 15-Nov-10 17-Aug-10 15-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 16-Nov-10 SAFA 47.33 41.82 41.42 42.63 45.90 43.95 41.36 43.09 42.02 42.67 40.09 42.97 C16:0 27.61 22.65 23.67 24.88 26.50 24.33 24.40 25.01 26.62 25.77 25.00 26.72 CT8:0 14.84 14.45 13.14 13.70 14.85 14.49 12.57 13.70 11.38 12.57 11.16 12.33 C20:0 0.54 0.48 0.40 0.36 0.55 0.58 0.46 0.43 0.46 0.42 0.38 0.38 C22:0 1.65 1.53 1.38 1.20 1.65 1.88 1.50 1.47 1.49 1.41 1.19 1.17 C24:0 2.69 2.71 2.82 2.50 2.35 2.68 2.43 2.48 2.07 2.51 2.36 2.37 MUFA 23.19 21.85 20.51 20.91 23.75 23.47 20.71 22.09 25.64 26.81 26.17 26.58 C16 1 0.83 0.60 0.61 0.61 1.39 0.73 0.86 0.82 1.31 1.19 1.31 1.37 C18 lco7 1.64 1.59 1.52 1.48 1.71 1.46 1.26 1.36 1.76 1.74 1.69 1.85 C18 lco9 17.39 16.39 14.75 15.66 17.37 18.10 15.50 16.99 19.17 20.31 19.79 19.93 C20 1 0.28 0.36 0.24 0.25 0.40 0.35 0.14 0.18 0.30 0.31 0.20 0.24 C22 1 0.10 0.11 0.08 0.10 0.16 0.13 0.09 0.07 0.22 0.11 0.08 0.10 C24 1 2.95 2.81 3.30 2.81 2.72 2.69 2.87 2.66 2.87 3.15 3.10 3.10 PUFA 29.30 36.20 37.99 36.36 30.24 32.48 37.79 34.69 32.34 30.35 33.49 30.20 HUFA 13.41 15.97 17.90 16.60 14.57 14.99 18.04 17.64 14.46 14.95 16.28 14.49 co6 PUFA 21.43 26.03 27.11 26.56 22.27 23.62 27.89 25.05 27.66 25.02 27.89 25.56 co 6 HUFA 5.69 6.28 7.46 7.37 6.97 6.82 8.60 8.61 10.26 9.89 10.97 10.08 C18:2 15.56 19.62 19.56 19.10 15.19 16.69 19.15 16.30 17.17 14.96 16.67 15.24 C18:3 0.19 0.13 0.08 0.10 0.11 0.10 0.14 0.14 0.23 0.17 0.25 0.25 C20:3 0.51 0.47 0.50 0.47 0.50 0.39 0.60 0.67 0.85 0.87 1.15 0.96 C20:4 4.94 5.47 6.55 6.51 5.99 6.05 7.44 7.46 7.38 7.82 8.65 8.01 C22:4 0.16 0.21 0.34 0.30 0.30 0.33 0.43 0.38 1.94 1.00 1.00 0.95 C22:5 0.08 0.13 0.08 0.09 0.18 0.05 0.13 0.09 0.09 0.20 0.17 0.16 co3 PUFA 8.04 10.24 10.92 9.85 8.05 8.92 9.98 9.71 4.58 5.38 5.72 4.79 co 3 HUFA 7.72 9.69 10.44 9.23 7.60 8.17 9.44 9.03 4.20 5.06 5.31 4.41 C18:3 0.32 0.55 0.48 0.61 0.45 0.75 0.54 0.68 0.38 0.32 0.41 0.38 C20:5 3.58 4.75 4.47 4.57 3.29 3.80 3.84 4.21 1.00 1.13 1.16 0.99 C22:5 1.05 1.27 1.77 1.37 1.03 1.15 1.53 1.38 0.83 1.17 1.22 1.05 C22:6 3.09 3.66 4.20 3.30 3.28 3.22 4.07 3.44 2.37 2.76 2.93 2.37 AA/EPA 1.38 1.15 1.47 1.43 1.82 1.59 1.94 1.77 7.38 6.93 7.47 8.12 £26S 42.38 39.35 41.70 44.39 47.82 45.50 47.68 48.80 70.96 66.14 67.39 69.57 Tab 8c. Elderly group C: total blood fatty acid changes over 3-month intervention 2 o CO H X o a CO o r o S CI C2 C3 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 16-Nov-10 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 16-Nov-10 15-Aug-10 14-Sep-10 19-Oct-10 16-Nov-10 SAFA 42.90 42.43 38.67 37.59 42.38 40.47 39.23 42.82 46.16 44.26 33.62 41.12 C16:0 26.58 25.84 24.25 22.68 27.56 26.79 25.96 28.39 28.25 27.95 22.54 26.56 C18:0 12.22 12.65 11.05 11.22 11.17 10.83 10.21 11.14 13.16 12.67 8.87 11.42 C20:0 0.45 0.44 0.39 0.44 0.48 0.44 0.38 0.41 0.53 0.39 0.27 0.31 C22:0 1.45 1.25 1.08 1.16 1.37 0.94 1.03 1.07 1.73 1.32 0.68 0.98 C24:0 2.20 2.24 1.90 2.08 1.79 1.47 1.66 1.81 2.50 1.93 1.27 1.86 MUFA 28.65 24.74 27.82 28.79 30.48 27.82 26.37 26.37 25.14 22.51 32.21 28.01 C16 1 1.42 0.91 1.07 0.81 2.40 1.57 1.96 1.73 1.29 1.26 1.66 1.43 C18 lco7 2.04 1.61 1.83 2.14 2.04 1.80 1.71 1.88 1.51 1.49 1.85 1.88 C18 lco9 22.04 18.88 22.20 22.84 23.24 22.26 20.30 20.12 19.03 16.80 26.13 21.70 C20 1 0.28 0.27 0.19 0.34 0.22 0.24 0.19 0.19 0.22 0.26 0.77 0.32 C22 1 0.15 0.10 0.08 0.13 0.12 0.14 0.06 0.09 0.16 0.13 0.07 0.09 C24 1 2.71 2.97 2.45 2.54 2.45 1.81 2.14 2.37 2.93 2.57 1.73 2.60 PUFA 28.25 32.72 33.34 33.49 26.89 31.53 34.15 30.57 28.46 33.24 33.96 30.68 HUFA 11.29 14.85 14.78 12.84 11.20 13.22 16.35 13.03 11.17 15.55 13.98 13.85 C06PUFA 24.95 26.40 26.52 27.15 23.10 24.66 25.05 24.53 25.16 25.90 25.03 24.07 co 6 HUFA 8.24 8.91 8.23 7.76 7.72 6.88 7.98 7.28 8.06 8.69 6.93 7.98 C18:2 16.52 17.38 18.12 19.25 15.13 17.60 16.82 17.01 16.87 17.03 17.91 15.91 C18:3 0.20 0.12 0.17 0.14 0.25 0.18 0.25 0.24 0.23 0.18 0.20 0.18 C20:3 0.95 0.67 0.80 0.68 1.05 0.87 1.01 0.95 0.89 0.88 0.79 0.83 C20:4 6.64 7.52 6.90 6.57 5.97 5.47 6.36 5.80 6.43 7.09 5.61 6.53 C22:4 0.53 0.59 0.41 0.38 0.58 0.43 0.50 0.43 0.62 0.63 0.42 0.49 C22:5 0.12 0.13 0.11 0.13 0.12 0.11 0.11 0.10 0.12 0.09 0.10 0.12 co3 PUFA 3.43 6.36 6.93 6.42 3.95 6.98 9.29 6.24 3.47 7.27 9.06 6.71 co 3 HUFA 3.05 5.94 6.55 5.08 3.48 6.34 8.37 5.75 3.11 6.86 7.05 5.87 C18:3 0.37 0.42 0.38 1.34 0.46 0.64 0.91 0.49 0.35 0.41 2.01 0.84 C20:5 0.58 2.16 2.58 1.93 0.96 2.84 3.41 2.18 0.64 2.82 2.99 2.51 C22:5 0.71 0.93 1.11 0.93 0.74 1.09 1.45 1.02 0.66 1.06 1.03 0.98 C22:6 1.76 2.84 2.86 2.22 1.78 2.42 3.51 2.56 1.81 2.98 3.03 2.39 AA/EPA 11.44 3.48 2.68 3.41 6.22 1.93 1.87 2.66 10.04 2.52 1.87 2.61 £26S 72.94 60.01 55.67 60.45 68.90 52.05 48.80 55.84 72.12 55.89 49.55 57.61 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Discussion The main purpose of this pilot study was to assess the feasibility of titrating and reaching plateaus in such titration exercises of blood fatty acids - the omega-6 status - in individuals (males & females) of a typical Western subpopulation group distributed over three generations (adolescents, adults & elderly) (fig.l). Another purpose was to assess the potential of new markers (vascular rhythms) and symptoms (sympatho-vagal balance) of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation (ACR) as probes to access and eventually assess the influence of changes in blood fatty acids on psychosomatic health. The subgroup involved was a family composed of two twin m/f children, the mother and her two parents; external references were used for the sake of controls, mainly. The heterogeneity of the subgroup was demonstrated at levels ranging from lifestyle, morphology & body mass composition, blood group, behavior and composition, personality & psychosomatic aspects (vascular rhythms & sympatho-vagal balance) of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation, endothelium function & hemodynamic parameters, and blood fatty acids. The results presented in tables 1 to 7 do characterize each individual along these aspects and as such confirm the reliability of non-invasive and non-obtrusive characterization of a wide array of information about individual's psychosomatic health status. More specifically, the vascular rhythm of the systolic blood pressure appear to provide an interesting insight into the daily average load - mind strain - that an individual take on his / herself on a scale that represents his / her own current capacity of coping with such load. If confirmed, such probes to mind strain could tell about how much an individual stretches his / herself on an average daily basis, according to the following tentative score scale: • 0-25% would indicate a probable need for socio-psychological advice as the subject really under-performs his/her potential and such situation if not taken care of could eventually take his/her to depressed mood and rampant vigor, fatigue and diseases; • 25-50% would support the view that the subject has much room for improvement in his/her career and life, if he/she so wish. Clearly, he/she can do far better. Just need to do it. Little guidance from family and close friends may perhaps help his/her a long way; • 50-75% would identify a subject that is not far from knowing him/herself, the kind of mature individual. He/she may just want to stay there or to take the next challenge with appropriate counseling and/or training in order to keep progressing; • 75-100% would points to someone who is pushing. For him/her, the sky is the limit, which is fine as the society needs his/her, too, and provided he/she scores ok in his/her body resistance (YBR), he/she should be a long run winner; • >100% would indicate that the subject should come down a bit for a while. He/she overdo it at the cost of his/her own health. He/she definitely burnt his/her flame. The larger prominence of the week and half-week versus the day early and late in life is corroborated in this rather small population involving subjects in an age range (17 to 71 years) narrower than that in earlier studies. Ultradian endpoints of interest in their own right and as a gauge of a non-sinusoidal circadian waveform deserve mapping on a population basis, as do infradians, for alignment with environmental cycles in longer and larger follow-up studies. The parameters of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation obtained on the Task Force Monitor revealed interesting aspects of the sympatho-vagal balance in the five family subjects in relation with their self-assessed personality traits put in evidence by EPQ-R. This approach may in fact well probe and compare endogenous versus behavioral personalities (fig. 4) and as such represents a potentially interesting approach to evidence-based psychology. 155 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 An endoscore cut-off value of 1.67 provides a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 77% to diagnosing coronary endothelial function (Bonetti PO et al., 2004, 2005). The endoscore has been found to be inversely correlated with the number of cardiovascular risk factors (Kuvin et al., 2003, 2007). In this study, it was clear that all but one elderly subjects had endoscore values well above (> 2.0) pathological cut-off range at the exception of one adolescent whose data must be excluded for obvious reason (see table 5). Arterial stiffness was highly variable among individuals and in no correlation with endothelium function; however a clear trend to increased stiffness with age was observed. With regards to fatty acids, the three adolescents and three elderly reach similar omega-6 status (55 ± 5%) after two months of supplementation and this was not influenced by the original status of the individual. The "AQ6S = -7.5 units/(g co-3 HUFA)/day" response observed in these two age groups was confirmed in the adult subgroup supplemented with different daily amounts of co-3 HUFA. In fact, blood fatty acids titration appear to respond linearly to daily intake, independently of gender, age, lifestyle, body composition and other standard medical health markers and symptoms. This observation leads to the tentative conclusion that the daily intake of co-3 HUFA needed to reach/ maintain an Omega-6 Status (Q6S) of 50% in the blood-tissue of a modern Western population in the presence of a "blunter" of inter-individual genotypic variance nears 3.35g. The Omega-6 status was also expressed as tissue resistance (from 0 to 100%) to chronic inflammation based on earlier reported population-based observations that the omega-6 status is a reliable predictor of %risk of CHD (http:// efaeducation.nih.gov/sig/dietbalancel.htmO. according to the following tentative score scale: • 0-25% would indicate the need for nutritional advice for the subject obviously feeds him/herself the wrong fats, and probably not exactly the ones he/she may think. It is time to change for there currently is no umbrella, the higher the mind stress —► body strain (YMS) the higher the risk of developing a degenerative chronic disease on the long run; • 25-50% would indicate there is room for improvement in the diet. The subject is borderline good in comparison with most of his/her peers, but still not quite on the safe side as yet; • 50-75% would be sign of a modern well-informed dietician or lucky enough individual to dwell nearby one. Body tissues can absorb the daily load and eventually heal if hurt. Great status; • 75-100% calls for the big fight. Body tissues are all set for keeping up with a very active lifestyle and will sustain continuous strive towards the better. Mind and body have evolved independently in conscious species, yet they interact closely for the span of a lifetime within individuals. Whereas the mind-related memes have evolved rapidly over the past 5-10,000 years of nascent humanity, the body-related genes have barely changed. Gene-wise, modern man is very much similar to his hunter-gatherer ancestor. It is therefore no surprise that memes and genes have a difficult time cohabitating the same environment. Mind stress induces body strain, which if not taken care of at individual level, induces tissue injuries and chronic degenerative diseases, ie functional gastrointestinal disorders, cardiovascular disease, and the like. For various reasons extending from commercial availability of non-invasive/ non-obtrusive monitors to access to institutional analytical interpretation of collecting data and established international data banks, the parameters of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation (ACR), ie vascular rhythms (SBP, DBP, HRV) and sympatho-vagal balance (HRV-LF/HF) were selected as far-reaching probes to monitor mind-body interactions. The experimental group consisted of a Polish family (five members) extending on three generations, three external references (one per generation) and the promoter of the study (Chronomics). The only variable in the 3 months monitoring program was the blood omega-6 status of the subjects that was taken down from the Polish standard of-75% to somewhere closer (-55%) to the Mediterranean standard of through the daily dietary intake of-2.5 g omega-3 long chain (C20- 156 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 22) fatty acids associated with a epi-genetic/-genomic blunter (premix of trace elements involved in PPAR-oc regulated lipid metabolism). Vascular rhythms did reveal large variations, among and within individuals, respective to their environmental exposure to stress. Blood/tissue responses to omega-3 fatty acids titration appeared to be rather uniform across the board. In conclusion, the parameters of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation (ACR) appear as promising probes to monitor mind-body interactions and to detect - perhaps assess - risk of developing chronic degenerative diseases at individual level. Given the volatile response of vascular rhythms to mind-body stress, nothing short of an urgent re-balancing of omega-6/3 fatty acids at tissue level will likely suffice to control the explosion of chronic degenerative diseases at population level. The longitudinal study will be conducted in three different age subgroups of healthy subjects living in Southern Poland (adolescents, adults, elderly), with focus on psychosomatic markers and symptoms of development of cardiovascular and psychological diseases. References Bonetti PO, Pumper GM, Higano ST, Holmes DR Jr., Kuvin JT, Lerman A. A non-invasive identification of patients with early coronary atherosclerosis by assessment of digital reactive hyperemia. JACC 2004;44:2137-2141. Bonetti PO et al. Research Highlights - Editorial review of a non-invasive test for endothelial dysfunction. Nature Clinical Practice Cardiovascular Medicine 2005;2:64-65. Brzozowski P, Drwalem RL (1995). Kwestionariusz osobowošci Eysencka. Polska adaptacja EPQ R. Podr^cznik. Warszawa, Pracownia Testów Psychologicznych PTP Crawford MA, Doyle W, Drury P, Ghebremeskel K, Harbige L, Leyton J, William G (1989). The Food Chain for n-6 and n-3 fatty acids with special reference to animal products. In: Dietary w3 and w6 Fatty Acids: Biological Effects and Nutritional Essentiality (Galii C & Simopoulos AP, eds) NATO ASIA. Plenum Press, New York, 1989,171:5-19. De Meester F. Progress in Lipid Nutrition: The Columbus Concept Addressing Chronic Diseases. In: A Balanced Omega-6/Omega-3 Fatty Acid Ratio, Cholesterol and Coronary Heart Disease (Simopoulos AP & De Meester F, eds.) World Rev Nutr Diet 2009; 100:110-121. Eysenck SB, Eysenck HJ, Barrett P. A revised version of the psychoticism scale. Personality and Individual Differences 1985;6:21-29. El Kochairi I, Montagner A, Rando G, Lohmann C, Matter CM, Wahli W. Beneficial effects of combinatorial micronutrition on body fat and atherosclerosis in mice. Cardiovas Res 2011, doi:10.1093/cvr/cvrl46. Fedacko J, Pella D, Mechírová V, Horvath P, Rybár R, Varjassyová P, Vargová V. n-3 PUFAs - From dietary supplements to medicines. Pathophysiology. 2007; 14(2): 127-32. Galii C, Rise P, Ghezzi S, Marangoni F. Fast Determination of Fatty Acids in Whole Blood Collected from Fingertips : Application to the Assessment of Fatty Acids Patterns (and Various Indexes) in Population Studies. World Rev Nutr Diet 2009;100:35-45. Gubin D, Cornelissen G, Halberg F, Gubin G, Uezono K, Kawasaki T. The human blood pressure chronome: a biological gauge of aging. In Vivo 1997;11:485-494. Halberg F, Cornelissen G, Otsuka K, Siegelova J, Fiser B, Dusek J, Homolka P, Sanchez de la Pena S, Singh RB, BIOCOS project. Extended consensus on means and need to detect vascular variability disorders (VVDs) and vascular variability syndromes (VVSs). Leibniz-Online Nr. 5, 2009 (http:// www.leibniz-sozietaet.de/journaD. 35 pp. Kang JX. Balance of omega-6/omega-3 fatty acids is important for health: The evidence from gene transfer studies. Word Rev Nutr Diet 2004; 95:93-102. 157 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Kuvin JT, Patel AR, Sliney KA, Pandian NG, Sheffy J, Schnall RP, Karas RH, Udelson JE. Assessment of peripheral vascular endothelial function with finger arterial pulse wave amplitude. AHJ 2003;146:168-174. Kuvin JT, Mammen A, Mooney P, Alsheikh-Ali A, Karas RH. Assessment of peripheral vascular endothelial function in the ambulatory setting. Vascular Medicine 2007;12:13-16. Lands WEM. A Critique of Paradoxes in Current Advice on Dietary Lipids. ProgrLip Res;2008,47:77-106. McNamara, D.J. (2002) Egg, plasma cholesterol, and heart disease risk. In: Eggs and Health Promotion (Ed. Watson, R.R.), S2 Cholesterol and Health: Role of Eggs, 2002;8:71-81. Okuyama, H., Fujii, Y, and Ikemoto, A. N-6/N-3 ratio of dietary fatty acids rather than hypercholesterolemia as the major risk factor for atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease. J. Health Sei., 2000;46(3):157. Siegelovä J, Fiser B. Medical device Task Force Monitor in diagnostics of syncope by means of head-up tilt table testing. Vnitr Lek. 2006 Feb;52(2): 160-6 [Article in Czech]. Simopoulos AP. Evolutionary Aspects of Diet and Essential Fatty Acids. World Rev Nutr Diet 2001;88:8-27. Singh R. Study of Nutrition, Anxiety, Stress and Behaviour in Relation to Cardiovascular Risk Factors in the Elderly Urban Population of Moradabad, India, Thesis for PhD, Department of Psychology, Gokuldas Girls College, Moradabad, Rohilkhand University, Bareilly, 1998. Wilczynska-Kwiatek A, Singh RB, De Meester F. Nutrition and Behaviour: The Role of Omega 3 Fatty Acids. The Open Nutraceuticals Journal 2010;3:119-128. Wilczynska-Kwiatek A, De Meester F, Singh RB, Lapihski L. Western Diet and Behaviour: The Columbus Concept. In: Modern Dietary Fat Intakes in Disease Promotion (De Meester F, Zibadi S, Watson RR, eds.). New York: Humana Press 2010,3-29. Wilczynska A, Singh R, De Meester F. Nutritional Modulators of Neuropsychiatric Dysfunction. The Open Nutraceuticals Journal 2010;3:52-60. 158 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Psychological & Oxidative stresses (Environment & Food) Mechanical stress (blood pressure, ischemia) —r- frapoE uno Dietary Cholesterol Dietary Omega-3 Infection (Chlamydia, Herpes virus,,) Injury %toHUFA = 25-75 Uhmg-r (lsoprenyl, Ras) Tissue desensitized ros overproduction Persistent inflammation Cell pTuliferation 7^r\ Atherogenesis Carcinogenesis Brain Diseases Fig.l. Modern view on chronic degenerative diseases Chronic degenerative diseases account for some 85% of all annual death worldwide (WHO Global Health Observatory: Cause-specific mortality and morbidity http://apps.who.int/ghodata/). They also represent a major threat to modern civilizations and their societies as they appear to cause ever earlier acute morbidity which, in some cases, transmits from one generation to the next through epigenetic / genomic inheritance. Cardiovascular ill-health was first; mental ill-health appears second in a row that extends to the wide spectrum of exploding modern inflammatory diseases related to a most single cause, ie the typical 75% proportion of co6 highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs) in blood total lipids (%co6 in HUFAs = 75). 159 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 (A2) Al ! A3 YS' (Bl)— -{B2J— - ci : C3 (C2) (B3) Fig.2. Social distribution of pilot subject group {A1A3-B2-C1C3} shapes a family extending on 3 generations: Al A3 (m/f twin children); B2 (Mother); C1C3 (Grand Parents). {A2-B1B3-C2} are external references with no family connection. l-JLLCHM EnviruLtilKii.I TnJfninl FHLÜtS SPDii Socio Disorders Mind Spes* CHftOMOMlCS TRIAL Tissue Chronic Inftamrnalinn li Nod Communicable Qhoas Educilion (Mernes) Strain Autonomic Curduiv-jscuSar Regulation (Genes) svr*. Symp-jlho Vagal lmbaljtlKi;a rsiycbuSoitLJlk Markers FsychoStunntlc SympCoim Vascular ViiriiibLlily Fig.3. The Chronomics Trial The Chronomics Trial will test-validate (1) the sympatho-vagal balance of the autonomic cardiovascular regulation, on the one hand, the circadian & infradian vascular rhythms of blood pressure & heart rate, on the other hand, for accessing/assessing markers and symptoms, respectively, of the mind stress/resilience (education) —► body strain/resilience (nutrition) response, and (2) the reliability of such probes for predicting socio-psychological disorders otherwise assessed by conventional tests (MSV2, EPQ-R, PANAS, GHQ-28) and non-communicable diseases otherwise confirmed by standard biomedical examinations (morphological & blood/urine parameters). 2 MSV: Self-perceived and assessed mood (M), stress (S) & vigor (V). 160 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 S ympath ctic: V aga I {Task Force Monitor) EPO-R fSdf Questionnaire. E 1/E I 2.7-2,6 E 0.2-0,3 Environment A. (Í\A, (B.+ -M--(B3) (C2) 1-1 S-1.1 E E E4-LI I/E I/E ES-Lé I/E E6-L7 Fig.4. Endogenous vs Behavioral Personalities Endogenous personalities assessed by beat-to-beat heart rate variabilities reveal hidden aspects of behavioral personalities self-assessedby psychological questionnaires: whereas the mother B2 clearly is a true balanced personality as per TSF & EPQ-R, her parents CI & C3 have achieved this state with experience/age only, in fact from two original opposite traits (the grand mother CI is an introvert whereas the grand father C3 is an extrovert to start with). Her two twins behave as extroverts, but only her daughter Al is a true one, whereas her son A3 is more educationally so. Left-hand side diagram shows sympatho:vagal balance (LFnu-dBP:HFnu-RRI) under spontaneous (Fl) and controlled (F2:0.33 Hz) breathing conditions. Right-hand side diagram shows scores in EPQ-R self-assessment questionnaires (E: Extrovert; L: Lie) normalized to 1-10 sten scales. TFM: Task Force Monitor; EPQ-R: Eysenck Personality Questionnaire - Revised. 161 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 SEVEN DAY AMBULATORY BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING: AMBULATORY ARTERIAL STIFFNESS INDEX IN PATIENTS AFTER INFARCTUS OF MYOCARDIUM Siegelová J., Fišer B., Havelková A., Dobšák P., Dušek J., Pohanka M., Cornélissen G.*, Halberg F.* Dept. of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Dept. of Functional Diagnostics and Rehabilitation, Dept. of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, St. Anna Teaching Hospital, Brno, CZ, "Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA Introduction Noninvasive methods for arterial stiffness evaluation are current requirements in clinical practice. Stiffening of large arteries predicts adverse cardiovascular outcomes (Benetos et al. 1997, Hayashi et al. 2002, Weber et al. 2004). Direct measurements of arterial stiffness require ultrasound equipment to measure peripheral arteries in the subject in the supine or sitting position (Van Bortel et al. 2002). The ambulatory arterial stiffness index (AASI) is defined as one minus the regression slope of diastolic on systolic pressure during 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and might be a measure of arterial stiffness (Li et al. 2006, Dolan et al. 2006). The stiffer arterial tree, the closer the regression slope and AASI are ranging from 0 to 1, respectively (Meaume et al. 2001, Schillaci et al. 2008). When studying the infradian rhythms in chronobiology of blood pressure we performed ambulatory blood pressure monitoring for 7 consecutive days (Siegelova et al. 2006, Halberg et al. 2006, Halberg et al. 2007). The preliminary results from our laboratory were published (Siegelova et al. 2008) and showed the variability of AASI in 6 full consecutive days. In the present study we attempted to estimate the reliability of AASI determination in individual patients after infarctus of myocardium in the days after cardiovascular exercise training and in the days without exercise training. Methods The set being monitored consisted of 41 patients after myocardial infarction in the past history more than 3 months before, of mean age 63 ±6.5 years and mean ejection fraction of the left ventricle 43 ± 12.3 %. The patients underwent phase II of cardiovascular rehabilitation (controlled ambulatory rehabilitation program) lasting two to three months with the frequency of three times in a week at the Department of Functional Diagnostics and Rehabilitation of St. Anna Teaching Hospital. In the course of rehabilitation they went through 7-day ambulatory monitoring of blood pressure. During blood pressure recording they did not interrupt their pharmacotherapy. The seven-day blood pressure monitoring was made by using the instrument TM - 2421 of the Japanese firm AD on the principle of oscillometric methods of blood pressure measurement. The regime of measurement of blood pressure was performed for 7 days repeatedly every 30 minutes from 5 to 22 h during the day time and once in an hour from 22 to 5 h at night (Siegelova et al. 2006). The measured blood pressure values for every patient from the monitored set were statistically processed in the form of arithmetic means for systolic and diastolic blood pressure value during each hour for every day of the measurement. The average SBP and DBP and their standard deviations 162 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 (SD) in the given days were determined by the calculation of arithmetic mean of these values. We evaluated AASI in individual patients after infarctus of myocardium in the days after cardiovascular exercise training and in the days without exercise training separately. These data were used for every consecutive day of seven-day monitoring to calculate the slope of diastolic on systolic pressure and to calculate the ambulatory arterial stiffness index (AASI) as one minus regression slope of diastolic on systolic blood pressure. The study was approved by local ethic committee and the patients signed the informed consent. Results The results of AASI values in individual patients after infarctus of myocardium in the days after cardiovascular exercise training were presented in Table 1 and Table 2, in the days without exercise training in Table 3 and Table 4 together with 24-hour mean values of systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), pulse pressure (PP) and correlation coefficient R of 20 patients. Table 5 summarizes the mean data of AASI, SBP, DBP, PP, and R. S&PindDBP 1 Up It Ml* W h4lh ,hJ ■■ ■»■■ ;V4M< Fig. 1 Systolic and diastolic blood pressure in the day with cardiac exercise training (0 - 24) and in the day without exercise training (25 - 48) in patients after infarctus of myocardium 163 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab. 1 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index in the day of physical activity pat. age [years] EF [%] SBP [mm Hg] ± SD DBP [mm Hg] ± SD PP [mm Hg] AASI R 1 53 65 1. cycle 144 10,8 96 9,8 49 0,17 0,92 2. cycle 146 10,2 94 10,0 52 0,26 0,76 2 68 69 1. cycle 122 13,8 72 10,8 50 0,40 0,76 2. cycle 118 13,6 66 8,5 52 0,50 0,81 3 67 60 1. cycle 122 12,7 81 8,7 42 0,49 0,75 2. cycle 115 12,8 77 10,6 38 0,37 0,76 4 64 46 1. cycle 107 10,7 63 9,3 44 0,43 0,66 2. cycle 106 12,7 64 7,6 42 0,49 0,86 5 44 73 1. cycle 125 13,5 78 9,7 47 0,44 0,77 2. cycle 125 12,3 77 9,7 48 0,47 0,67 6 48 63 1. cycle 110 10,6 69 7,5 41 0,49 0,72 2. cycle 108 14,3 65 12,0 42 0,37 0,75 3. cycle 110 16,9 63 10,4 48 0,52 0,79 7 73 61 1. cycle 114 13,6 58 5,8 57 0,68 0,74 2. cycle 116 7,7 58 6,4 58 0,58 0,51 8 41 56 1. cycle 118 11,2 77 9,1 41 0,55 0,55 2. cycle 124 9,7 77 9,0 48 0,55 0,49 9 65 63 1. cycle 125 16,0 81 12,6 45 0,37 0,80 2. cycle 127 12,6 83 10,1 45 0,39 0,76 10 63 52 1. cycle 118 13,1 68 8,9 50 0,42 0,86 2. cycle 112 16,2 61 10,4 51 0,42 0,90 11 56 61 1. cycle 127 10,8 79 8,7 48 0,36 0,79 2. cycle 124 16,1 78 10,7 46 0,49 0,77 12 78 59 1. cycle 108 12,9 54 10,1 54 0,72 0,36 2. cycle 129 22,7 61 12,9 68 0,68 0,56 13 57 67 1. cycle 132 9,8 78 8,3 54 0,63 0,44 2. cycle 131 7,8 79 7,2 53 0,42 0,63 14 49 26 1. cycle 112 15,3 76 11,4 37 0,58 0,57 2. cycle 112 10,5 79 8,8 32 0,25 0,90 3. cycle 104 11,3 68 9,1 37 0,67 0,41 15 69 66 1. cycle 126 11,4 73 6,3 53 0,69 0,56 16 64 72 1. cycle 115 8,4 70 8,1 45 0,63 0,38 2. cycle 116 16,7 66 6,8 49 0,77 0,57 17 56 57 1. cycle 127 15,2 86 13,0 42 0,24 0,88 2. cycle 124 9,5 83 6,8 41 0,62 0,53 18 55 33 1. cycle 139 11,8 70 6,0 69 0,79 0,41 2. cycle 127 12,1 68 8,4 59 0,77 0,34 3. cycle 124 11,2 68 8,4 57 0,50 0,67 19 66 40 1. cycle 146 14,9 91 10,4 55 0,49 0,73 2. cycle 127 10,7 82 9,2 45 0,30 0,81 20 56 51 1. cycle 118 14,7 74 13,4 45 0,15 0,93 2. cycle 112 17,1 70 11,1 42 0,41 0,90 Note: EF ejection fraction, PP - pulse pressure; AASI - ambulatory arterial stiffness index; R -correlation coefficient 164 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab. 2 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index in the day of physical activity pat. age [years] EF [%] SBP [mm Hg] ± SD DBP [mm Hg] ± SD PP [mm Hg] AASI R 21 68 60 1. cycle 131 11,6 84 10,2 47 0,29 0,80 2. cycle 136 14,3 88 8,4 48 0,62 0,65 3. cycle 132 13,4 85 11,8 47 0,44 0,65 22 66 52 1. cycle 128 16,3 74 12,3 54 0,97 0,04 2. cycle 120 16,1 70 11,7 50 0,61 0,53 23 56 37 1. cycle 109 13,5 73 10,0 36 0,41 0,80 2. cycle 101 16,1 64 9,2 37 0,63 0,65 24 60 1. cycle 110 17,4 61 10,3 49 0,67 0,56 2. cycle 125 26,9 61 10,3 64 0,91 0,22 3. cycle 113 18,1 63 11,1 50 0,64 0,59 25 58 53 1. cycle 128 22,0 72 13,0 56 0,77 0,38 2. cycle 131 21,4 70 12,0 61 0,69 0,55 26 58 40 1. cycle 146 25,3 73 15,8 73 0,64 0,58 2. cycle 120 31,1 66 15,5 54 0,61 0,78 27 60 47 1. cycle 110 13,8 70 9,9 40 0,57 0,60 2. cycle 108 13,5 66 7,7 42 0,68 0,57 28 74 54 1. cycle 112 8,0 59 7,0 53 0,71 0,34 2. cycle 113 16,2 57 9,0 56 0,68 0,57 29 61 1. cycle 109 17,7 72 11,9 37 0,68 0,47 30 66 64 1. cycle 126 15,3 84 12,0 42 0,29 0,91 2. cycle 134 13,3 88 8,7 46 0,47 0,81 3. cycle 123 9,7 83 6,0 40 0,50 0,82 31 54 68 1. cycle 136 23,3 83 15,3 53 0,43 0,87 2. cycle 136 22,9 79 14,8 57 0,46 0,84 32 62 53 1. cycle 122 17,0 69 10,6 53 0,57 0,70 2. cycle 118 19,9 63 8,9 55 0,66 0,77 33 77 54 1. cycle 124 11,2 58 7,3 66 0,75 0,39 2. cycle 120 11,1 57 9,6 63 0,60 0,46 34 84 48 1. cycle 126 9,3 77 5,0 49 0,60 0,75 35 62 70 1. cycle 124 7,4 73 7,7 51 0,24 0,73 2. cycle 122 9,2 74 8,0 48 0,33 0,77 36 75 59 1. cycle 119 17,3 72 13,3 47 0,53 0,61 2. cycle 121 18,5 73 16,4 48 0,22 0,88 37 64 65 1. cycle 114 10,9 78 7,3 36 0,57 0,64 38 64 46 1. cycle 114 9,3 67 7,4 47 0,55 0,56 39 64 64 1. cycle 120 7,7 74 601 46 0,56 0,56 2. cycle 129 12,3 79 6,0 50 0,67 0,63 40 55 58 1. cycle 123 11,4 77 9,1 46 0,51 0,61 2. cycle 114 15,4 71 9,9 43 0,55 0,69 3. cycle 117 13,5 68 8,4 49 0,79 0,34 41 64 70 1. cycle 113 10,3 70 9,0 43 0,54 0,53 2. cycle 121 12,1 77 11,6 44 0,37 0,65 Note: EF- ejection fraction, PP - pulse pressure; AASI - ambulatory arterial stiffness index; R -correlation coefficient 165 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab. 3 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index in the day without physical activity pat. age [years] EF [%] SBP [mm Hg] ± SD DBP [mm Hg] ± SD PP [mm Hg] AASI R 1 53 65 1. cycle 145 11,8 91 11,3 54 0,14 0,90 2. cycle 136 10,6 85 10,0 51 0,21 0,83 2 68 69 1. cycle 127 12,7 74 8,1 53 0,65 0,56 2. cycle 122 15,9 71 9,9 51 0,59 0,66 3 67 60 1. cycle 116 15,4 79 15,1 38 0,09 0,92 2. cycle 115 8,2 78 9,4 38 0,46 0,47 4 64 46 1. cycle 105 13,3 62 9,5 43 0,53 0,66 2. cycle 106 5,9 68 7,8 39 0,43 0,43 5 44 73 1. cycle 120 10,4 76 9,0 44 0,34 0,76 2. cycle 116 10,6 71 8,1 45 0,39 0,80 6 48 63 1. cycle 115 12,9 71 8,7 44 0,82 0,27 2. cycle 106 10,7 59 8,9 47 0,52 0,58 3. cycle 115 11,7 69 8,8 46 0,50 0,67 7 73 61 1. cycle 115 13,8 57 8,4 59 0,51 0,81 2. cycle 118 8,8 58 5,9 60 0,59 0,62 8 41 56 1. cycle 116 8,4 75 10,7 41 0,49 0,40 2. cycle 118 6,9 74 6,1 43 0,44 0,63 9 65 63 1. cycle 119 9,0 78 6,0 41 0,66 0,51 2. cycle 121 21,4 77 10,4 44 0,74 0,53 10 63 52 1. cycle 115 12,2 65 7,8 50 0,53 0,74 2. cycle 117 15,3 66 9,9 52 0,42 0,89 11 56 61 1. cycle 124 12,1 77 9,1 47 0,50 0,66 2. cycle 127 19,0 76 13,1 52 0,49 0,75 12 78 59 1. cycle 112 11,4 55 n,o 57 0,83 0,18 2. cycle 117 7,7 60 13,6 57 0,44 0,32 13 57 67 1. cycle 134 7,9 79 9,0 55 0,47 0,46 2. cycle 137 11,1 78 8,7 59 0,49 0,65 14 49 26 1. cycle 111 n,o 78 8,8 33 0,34 0,82 2. cycle 110 12,5 77 8,5 32 0,53 0,69 3. cycle 109 15,8 75 11,3 33 0,39 0,86 15 69 66 1. cycle 119 14,2 77 4,6 42 0,92 0,25 16 64 72 1. cycle 113 11,4 67 11,1 46 0,72 0,29 2. cycle 112 14,9 64 7,9 48 0,93 0,13 17 56 57 1. cycle 126 11,2 83 7,9 43 0,51 0,69 2. cycle 114 10,5 78 8,5 36 0,42 0,71 18 55 33 1. cycle 121 13,4 68 7,2 53 0,71 0,53 2. cycle 129 10,5 67 9,8 61 0,49 0,55 3. cycle 125 11,7 68 8,9 57 0,43 0,75 19 66 40 1. cycle 129 12,9 82 9,6 47 0,48 0,70 2. cycle 130 16,4 85 13,8 45 0,20 0,95 20 56 51 1. cycle 126 20,0 78 12,9 49 0,53 0,73 2. cycle 108 12,3 65 10,3 43 0,41 0,71 Note: EF ejection fraction, PP correlation coefficient pulse pressure; AASI - ambulatory arterial stiffness index; R 166 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab. 4 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index in the day without physical activity pat. age [years] EF [%] SBP [mm Hg] ± SD DBP [mm Hg] ± SD PP [mm Hg] AASI R 21 68 60 1. cycle 133 11,0 84 9,6 49 0,65 0,40 2. cycle 136 13,7 88 13,8 48 0,73 0,44 3. cycle 129 9,6 84 9,5 45 0,30 0,71 22 66 52 1. cycle 127 17,9 74 11,1 53 0,78 0,35 2. cycle 128 16,5 78 8,5 50 0,70 0,58 23 56 37 1. cycle 99 10,7 63 8,4 36 0,77 0,29 2. cycle 108 6,6 74 7,4 34 0,14 0,77 24 60 1. cycle 120 16,8 65 13,0 55 0,64 0,46 2. cycle 117 17,3 64 8,9 53 0,96 0,07 3. cycle 121 21,0 66 9,4 55 0,81 0,42 25 58 53 1. cycle 132 18,3 65 16,7 67 0,59 0,45 2. cycle 130 23,3 63 12,4 67 0,80 0,37 26 58 40 1. cycle 121 23,0 67 15,8 54 0,53 0,68 2. cycle 122 25,5 72 17,2 50 0,55 0,67 27 60 47 1. cycle 117 13,4 72 9,9 45 0,52 0,70 2. cycle 106 11,5 60 6,9 46 0,76 0,39 28 74 54 1. cycle 112 13,9 56 8,4 56 0,93 0,11 2. cycle 112 14,0 56 6,4 56 0,84 0,35 29 61 1. cycle 119 18,5 72 9,2 47 0,75 0,50 30 66 64 1. cycle 133 16,5 86 13,0 47 0,42 0,74 2. cycle 129 12,8 84 11,7 45 0,35 0,72 3. cycle 123 14,5 81 11,9 42 0,30 0,85 31 54 68 1. cycle 134 21,4 77 13,1 57 0,49 0,83 2. cycle 133 25,7 75 13,6 58 0,62 0,73 32 62 53 1. cycle 122 13,3 69 9,4 53 0,46 0,77 2. cycle 117 18,1 66 9,1 51 0,65 0,68 33 77 54 1. cycle 122 15,4 61 11,6 61 0,54 0,61 2. cycle 118 11,6 56 8,6 62 0,58 0,56 34 84 48 1. cycle 131 16,2 76 11,8 55 0,47 0,73 35 62 70 1. cycle 124 15,1 76 9,6 48 0,58 0,66 2. cycle 124 12,3 73 9,5 51 0,33 0,87 36 75 59 1. cycle 131 15,6 74 13,3 57 0,61 0,46 2. cycle 119 17,6 74 14,8 45 0,45 0,65 37 64 65 1. cycle 108 12,1 72 10,6 36 0,28 0,82 38 64 46 1. cycle 113 8,8 67 8,1 46 0,43 0,62 39 64 64 1. cycle 125 11,3 78 9,0 47 0,37 0,80 2. cycle 131 13,5 81 8,1 50 0,57 0,71 40 55 58 1. cycle 118 10,5 75 6,9 43 0,65 0,53 2. cycle 119 11,1 72 8,3 47 0,55 0,61 3. cycle 115 10,9 73 9,5 42 0,29 0,82 41 64 70 1. cycle 117 10,1 74 4,0 43 0,91 0,22 2. cycle 123 26,0 72 12,9 51 0,75 0,50 Note: EF ejection fraction, PP correlation coefficient pulse pressure; AASI - ambulatory arterial stiffness index; R 167 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Tab. 5 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index n=41 cycle SBP [mm Hg] ± SD DBP [mm Hg] ± SD PP [mm Hg] ± SD AASI ±SD R ±SD 0-24h 121 9,9 73 9,0 49 7,9 0,53 0,17 0,65 0,18 25-48h 121 8,8 72 8,2 49 7,6 0,54 0,19 0,60 0,20 Pulse pressure (PP) Fig. 2 Pulse pressure in the day with cardiac exercise training (0 - 24) and in the day without exercise training (25 - 48) in patients after infarctus of myocardium Note: EF ejection fraction, PP - pulse pressure; AASI - ambulatory arterial stiffness index; R -correlation coefficient Every patient had in the seven-day record one, two or three cycles of days with physical activity and without physical activity. The systolic and diastolic blood pressure variations, AASI variations, PP variations can be seen in Tables 1, 2, 3, 4 and the inter-individual variations of AASI are large. Table 5 and fig. 1, 2, 3, 4 summarize the mean values ± SD of AASI, SBP, DBP, PP and R in the days with exercise and in the days without exercise. There are not significant differences in the mean values. These results summarize the data of patients after infarctus of myocardium, who are under therapy with ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, Calcium antagonists and statins. DISCUSSION Arterial stiffness is increased when elastic properties of the arterial wall are reduced (Kotsis et al. 2011). Aging is a process that causes structural and functional modifications in the vasculature, resulting in decreased arterial compliance and ability of arteries to strain and accommodate changes in blood pressure. 168 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 I Fig. 3 Ambulatory arterial stiffness index in the day with cardiac exercise training (0 - 24) and in the day without exercise training (25 - 48) in patients after infarctus of myocardium It has been observed that vascular alterations that occur in otherwise healthy senior people, including an increase in stiffness and thickness of large arteries as well as endothelial dysfunction, seem to be more extensive in patients with hypertension or atherosclerosis at an earlier age (Lakatta et al. 2003). This status of subclinical vascular disease may not reflect an early stage of hypertension or atherosclerosis but rather an interaction between vascular aging and vascular disease manifestation. Therefore a new pathophysiological model was introduced for deeper understanding of cardiovascular risk. The idea of early vascular aging, that is the acceleration of vascular aging, seems to be a promising tool for clinical guidance in individuals at increased cardiovascular risk or a strong family history of early cardiovascular manifestation (Nilsson et al. 2009). The simplest explanation for the variation in AASI is that it reflects spontaneous variability in arterial stiffness from one session to another. However, it should be considered that AASI is under the influence of other sources of variability, which are necessarily related to arterial functional properties (Schillaci et al. 2008). We have not found differences between the days with exercise training and the days without exercise training. Due to mathematical reasons AASI obtained form standard regression analysis depends on day-night blood pressure change (Schillaci et al. 2007), and hence variation in the latter may be expected to induce variation in the former. The reproducibility of day-night blood pressure changes and of the dipper or non-dipper classification is far from being optimal. In a recent study (Henskens et al. 2008) in which 150 hypertensive patients underwent 24-hour blood pressure monitoring twice, between section measurement for the dipping or non-dipping classification was found to vary from fair-to-moderate and the coefficient of repeatability of day-night blood pressure change was as high as 42-49 %. Such a large variation can be expected to influence variability of AASI as well. The strong relation between AASI and day-night blood pressure changes is further confirmed by the paradoxical finding that daytime and night-time AASI are both much higher (0.48 ±0.26 and 0.40 ± AASI 169 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ILI DJ lit Fig. 4 Correlation coefficient between systolic and diastolic blood pressure, measured 24 h in the day with cardiac exercise training (0 - 24) and in the day without exercise training (25 - 48) in patients after infarctus of myocardium 0.21) than the corresponding 24-h values (0.31 ± 0.17), emphasizing its limited ability to specifically reflect arterial wall properties (Schilaci et al. 2007). A further source of variation in AASI values is represented by the night/day ratio of blood pressure measurements number. In our study we calculated AASI from the blood pressure values, given in the regime one per hour. In the literature it was demonstrated that the dependence of AASI on the number of daytime and nocturnal readings is a phenomenon related to the above relationship between day-night blood pressure reduction and AASI (Schillaci et al. 2007). There is a need for more substantial data on AASI repeatability in larger cohorts of hypertensive patients and in the normal individuals in any case, due attention should be paid to the influence of day-night blood pressure changes and to that of daytime and night-time between-reading time intervals on AASI and its variability (Detechering et al. 2007). Our results show also variability of pulse pressure on the days with and without physical activity. Pulse pressure is considered to be an important cardiovascular risk (Halberg et al. 2007). Another number of studies revealed that brachial pulse pressure predicts the risk of cardiovascular events, especially in the elderly, and that its prognostic value is closely related to systolic blood pressure (Darné et al. 1989, Franklin et al. 2001, Staesen et al. 2000, Benetos et al. 2000, Kotsis et al. 2011, London et al. 2001, Safar et al. 2002). The inter-individual variation of AASI is large. It doesn't mean that the determination of AASI as a risk factor of individual patient is useless, but that the determination of AASI from 24-hour blood pressure monitoring should be supplemented by blood pressure self-monitoring lasting several days irrespective of the method of AASI calculation. 170 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 CONCLUSION The results showed no differences between systolic and diastolic blood pressure, ambulatory arterial stiffness index, pulse pressure and correlation coefficient in 24 values measured in the day with exercise and in the day without exercise in patients after infarctus of myocardium. There are not significant differences in the mean values. These results summarize the data of patients after infarctus of myocardium, who are under therapy with ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, Calcium antagonists and statins. Support MSM0021622402 REFERENCES 1. Benetos A, Safar M, Rudnichi A et al. 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Aortic pulse wave velocity predicts cardiovascular mortality in subjects > 70 years of age. Arterioscler Thromb Vase Biol 2001;21:2046-2050 8. Schillaci G, Parati G. Ambulatory arterial stiffness index: merits and limitations of a simple surrogate measure of arterial compliance. J Hypertension 2008;26:182-185. 9. Siegelová J, Dušek J, Fiser B, Homolka P, Vank P, Kohzuki M, Cornellisen G, Halberg F. Relationship between circadian blood pressure variation and age analyzed from 7-day ambulatory monitoring. J Hypertension 2006;24:Suppl.6:122. 10. Kotsis V.,Stabouli S.,Karafilis L, Nilsson P. Early vascular aging and the role of central blood pressure. J Hypertension 2011;29:10:1847-1853. 11. Lakatta E., Levy D. Arterial and cardiac aging: major shareholders in cardiovascular disease enterprises (part I). Circulation 2003; 107:139-146. 12. NilssonPM., BoutouyrieP, Laurent S. Vascular aging: A tale of EVAand ADAM in cardiovascular risk assessment and prevention. Hypertension 2009;54:3-10. 13. Halberg, F., Cornélissen, G. & Schwartzkopff, O.. Seven day blood pressure measurement: Contraversion in single 24-h profiles of blood pressure and heart rate. In Halberg, F., Kenner, T., Fišer, B., Siegelová, J. Noninvasive Methods in Cardiology, 2006, s. 10 - 26. 14. Halberg, F., Cornélissen, G., Otsuka, K, Sanchez de laPeňa, S., Schwartzkopff, O., Watanabe, Y, Pati, A. K, Wall, D. G., Delmore, P., Borer, K, Beaty, L. A., Nolley, E. S., Adams, C, Siegelová, Jarmila, Homolka, Pavel, Dušek, Jiří, Fišer, Bohumil, Přikryl, P. Why and how to implement 7-day/24 hour blood pressure monitoring? Geronto Geriatrics, 2007, 8, 1-31. 15. Siegelová J., Fišer B. Variability of ambulatory arterial stiffness index and of 24-h blood pressure values in patients monitored for 6 consecutive days. J Hypertension 2008;26:1501-1502. 171 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 16. Schillaci G., Parati G. Reply to variability of ambulatory arterial stiffness index and of 24-h blood pressure values in patients monitored for 6 consecutive days. J Hypertension 2008;26:1502-1503. 17. Schillaci G., Parati G., Pirro M. et al. Ambulatory arterial stiffness index is not a specific marker of reduced arterial compliance. Hypertension 2007;49:986-991. 18. Henskens L.H., Kroon A.A., Van Oostenbruge R.J. et al. Different classification of nocturnal blood pressure dipping affect the prevalence of dippers and nondippers and the relation with target-organ damage. J Hypertension 2008;26:691-698. 19. Schillaci G, Parati G, Pirro M et al. Dipping safely into the ambulatory arterial stiffness index. Hypertension 2007;50:e61. 20. Schillaci G., Parati G., Pirro M. et al. Response to: interstudy to variability in the ambulatory arterial stiffness index. Hypertension 2007;50:e66. 21. Dechering D.G., Adiyaman A., van der Steen M. et al. Interstudy to variability in the ambulatory arterial stiffness index. Hypertension 2007;50:e65. 22. Darne B., Girerd X., Safar M., Cambien R, Guize L. Pulsatile versus steady component of blood pressure: a cross-sectional analysis of a prospective analysis of cardiovascular mortality. Hypertension 1989; 13: 392-400. 23. Franklin S.S., Larson M.G., Khan S.A., Wong N.D., Leip E.P, Kannel W.B., Levy D. Does the relationship of blood pressure to coronary heart disease risk change with aging? The Framingham Heart Study. Circulation 2001; 103:1245-1249. 24. Staessen J. A., Gasowski J.,Wang J.G., Thijs L., Den Hond E., Boissel J.P et al. Risk of untreated and treated isolated systolic hypertension in the elderly: meta-analysis of outcome trials. Lancet 2000; 355: 865-872. 25. Benetos A., Zureik M., Morcet J., Thomas R, Bean K., Safar M. et al. A decrease in diastolic blood pressure combined with an increase in systolic blood pressure is associated with a higher cardiovascular mortality in men. J Am Coll Cardiol 2000; 35: 73-80. 26. London G.M., Blacher J., Pannier B., Guerin A.P, Marchais S.J., Safar M. Arterial wave reflection and survival in end stage renal failure. Hypertension 2001; 38: 434-438. 27. Safar M., Blacher J., Pannier B. et al. Central PP and mortality in end-stage renal disease. Hypertension 2002; 39: 735-738. Prof. MUDr. Jarmila Siegelová, DrSc. Head, Dept. of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Kamenice 5 625 00 Brno 172 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 MEASUREMENT OF VASCULAR FUNCTION BY CARDIO ANKLE VASCULAR INDEX - THEORY, REPRODUCIBILITY AND AGING - Arno Schmidt-Trucksass Increased cyclic stress on the arterial system causes fragmentation of the elastin lamellae and concomitant increase of collagen in the arterial wall which results untreated in a stiffening of the artery1. The stiffening process is mainly associated with arterial aging but may be accelerated by increased atherosclerotic risk factor burden as present in hypertension, diabetes, dyslipoproteinemia, smoking or physical inactivity. Thus, there is a clinical reason to measure arterial stiffness in order to detect increased risk for cardiovascular events like myocardial infarction or stroke2. Several methods are available for the measurement of the arterial stiffness. Central and peripheral pulse wave velocity (PWV), augmentation index, stiffness index beta, pulse pressure, elastic modulus and cardio ankle vascular stiffness index (CAVI)3. The latest is derived from stiffness index beta with application of Bramwell-Hill equation4. BramweH-HiJI p - (in ^ ) ( "ff) equation Stiffness Index (J (local stiffness) n if* #> *v «.*> S3 3.** At* "V CAVI «vi--(ai,^-£-^) PWV in CAVI is measured from the beginning of the aorta to the tibial artery right above the ankle, thus covering central elastic type artery (aorta) and muscular type arteries (femoral and tibial artery) (Fig. 1 from 4). 173 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 The time intervals are determined by calculating distances between heart sound (microphone in 2nd to 3 rd intercostal notch) and the ascent of brachial and ankle pulse pressure curve, respectively (Fig. 2 from 4). In order to prove the validity of the application of stiffness index beta to Bramwell-Hill equation, the correlation of local aortic stiffness measured by transoesophagal echocardiography and CAVI was determined. A correlation Fig. 2 coefficient of r= 0.67 (p < 0.01) showed a reasonable association indicating that the application is valid5. CAVI is more independent of blood pressure than other measures of arterial stiffness like central PWV. This has been shown by the comparison of brachial ankle PWV and CAVI due to the effect of blood pressure lowering substances metoprolol (beta blocker) and doxazosin (alpha blocker). While both drugs reduced blood pressure and brachial ankle PWV, CAVI was exclusively lowered by doxazosin. Doxazosin - but not metoprolol - causes a relaxation of vascular smooth muscle cells, which indicates that CAVI reflects a change of vascular smooth muscle cell tone4. Reproducibility of parameters of arterial stiffness is a prerequisite for usage in clinical practice. CAVI was measured at five consecutive days in 22 subjects with an average of 41 years. The coefficient of variation was 3.8% which gives a good reproducibility6. It is common in daily practice that patients are examined at different time points over the day. Therefor we measured CAVI at 9-10, 13-14 and 17-18 hours across the day. Preliminary data shows that the reproducibility is even better. In the beginning the effect of age on arterial stiffness was mentioned. To discriminate healthy aging from risk factors, the age-associated increase of CAVI was measured in men and women with a low risk factor burden and no manifest cardiovascular disease. The biggest data base is derived from a Japanese Health screening program showing an increase of approximately 0.5 units with ten years4. Women had lower values at 0.2 at every age from 20 - 70 years, which seems to reflect the later incidence of myocardial infarction and stroke in female subjects. Ongoing research in Europe now aims to establish age tables for Caucasian subjects. The potential value of arterial stiffness for prevention will be strengthened in the future when the association of CAVI with hard endpoints (cardiovascular events and death) will be published. This is already existent for central PWV2 and is an aim of present CAVI research. In summary, CAVI has the potential to be established as a novel parameter of arterial stiffness in research and practice. 174 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 REFERENCES 1. London GM, Pannier B. Arterial functions: how to interpret the complex physiology. Nephrol Dial Transplant 2010;25(12):3815-23. 2. Vlachopoulos C, Aznaouridis K, Stefanadis C. Prediction of cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality with arterial stiffness: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Am Coll Cardiol 2010;55(13):1318-27. 3. Baulmann J, Nürnberger J, Slany J, et al. [Arterial stiffness and pulse wave analysis]. Dtsch Med Wochenschr 2010; 135 Suppl LS4-14. 4. Shirai K, Hiruta N, Song M, et al. Cardio-Ankle Vascular Index (CAVI) as a Novel Indicator of Arterial Stiffness: Theory, Evidence and Perspectives. J Atheroscler Thromb [Internet] 2011 [cited 2011 Jul 12];Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21628839 5. Takaki A, Ogawa H, Wakeyama T, et al. Cardio-ankle vascular index is anew noninvasive parameter of arterial stiffness. Circ J 2007;71(11): 1710-4. 6. Shirai K, Utino J, Otsuka K, Takata M. A novel blood pressure-independent arterial wall stiffness parameter; cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI). J Atheroscler Thromb 2006; 13(2): 101-7. Corresponding address: Prof. Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss, MD, MA; Professor and Chair of Sports Medicine, University of Basel, Institute of Exercise and Health Sciences, Sports Medicine, University Basel, Birsstr. 320B, St. Jakobs-Turm, 4052 Basel, Switzerland. EMAIL: Arno.Schmidt-Trucksaessfg), unibas.ch 175 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 EFFECTS OF OROFACIAL REHABILITATION AFTER STROKE Petr Konečný 12'3'53 Milan Elfmark 24, Karel Urbánek3, Jarmila Siegelová5. From: 1. Department of Rehabilitation. The Merciful Brothers' Hospital, Brno, Czech Republic. 2. Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, Palacký University, Olomouc, Czech Republic. 3. Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacký University Olomouc and University Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic. 4. Department of Biomechanics and Engineering Cybernetics, Faculty of Physical Culture, Palacký University, Olomouc, Czech Republic. 5. Department of Physiotherapy, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic. INTRODUCTION: Facial (n. VII) paresis is one of the most common disorders in patients after stroke, which is reflected by the change in facial movement. Stroke is defined as the rapidly developing focal or global symptoms of brain function disorder which last more than 24 hours or might result in the death of the patient, all without an apparent cause other than vascular origin (1). Stroke is an acute condition resulting from disorders of blood circulation (ischemia) or bleeding (haemorrhage) into the brain tissue. Common consequences of stroke are mobility and sensitivity disorders in the legs, arms and face; there can also be disturbances in speech and vision, impaired cognition, or it can even cause the death of the patient (2). Facial movement is one of the functions of the human nonverbal communication system. It serves not only to maintain the facial expression, but also has an important role in speech, singing, social communication interaction, food intake and eye protection. Facial muscles can alter the facial surface and in various ways impeding execution of their functions. In addition to opening and closing the eyes and mouth they also have a reporting function. Highly differentiated and complex facial musculature can express a large number of sensations and can reflect the state of mind and the mood of an individual. Paresis of the facial nerve after stroke causes a functional and aesthetic defect in a patient manifested by facial asymmetry with the muscle disability of the lower half of the face, falling of the corner of the mouth, saliva leakage from the corner of the mouth, asymmetrical smile and a speech explicitness disorder with atonia of the lips, tongue and throat (1, 2). In the present study this disability of facial movement and symmetry was evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively. Neurological facial examination was conducted on the basis of an examination of the function of the facial nerve. On the basis of a clinical examination, a diagnosis of central or peripheral paresis of the facial nerve was performed. We used standard international clinical scales in the quantitative n. VII paresis (paresis of nervus facialis) evaluation. The most commonly used test battery is testing by means of the House-Brackmann Grading System (HBGS) (3-5). Changes in facial movement were also the result of other symptoms, including the psychological state of the patient, and vice versa. Therefore, most cases of facial movement failure might be due to psychological consequences. Many patients suffered from anxiety and depression after stroke. Depression has many causes. One of the causes of depression can be changes of the face after facial paresis. After stroke, 50-60 % of patients suffer from depression within three months (6-9). Patients with depression after stroke have a worse prognosis. Deterioration in the quality of life is demonstrated with increasing motor movement disability in normal daily activities. Patients have worse rehabilitative care effect, a longer period of hospitalization and are less often able to return to the 176 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 home environment (6, 8, 10). The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) test was used to quantitatively evaluate the burden of depression (10-12). The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of central n. VII paresis in patients after stroke on functions of facial movement and mental functions using international clinical scales and the objective measurement of facial movement changes using two-dimensional video analysis (13-15). METHODOLOGY: The study included 99 patients in the subacute stage of stroke (1-2 weeks after onset). Patients began rehabilitation on the second day after the stroke. Initially they were in the "stroke unit" / ICU/ - Neurology Clinic, Hospital in Olomouc - and after the transfer rehabilitation continued at the Department of Rehabilitation and Exercise Medicine, University Hospital in Olomouc. The inclusion criterion for the study was central n. VII paresis after stroke. The exclusion criterion was lack of cooperation. At the beginning of rehabilitation, patients were randomly divided into two comparable groups, i.e. experimental and control groups. The experimental group consisted of 50 subjects, 26 of which were males with the average age of 57 years and 24 females with the average age of 62 years; the type of stroke: 38 (76%) ischemia and 12 (24%) haemorrhage, lesion side: 32 (64%) right-sided hemiparesis and 18 (36%) left-sided hemiparesis, level of severity: average value was 12 (SD 2) according to NIHSS. The control group consisted of 49 subjects - 27 males with the average age of 60 years and 22 females with the average age of 61.5 years; the type of stroke: 39 (79%) ischemia and 10 (31%) haemorrhage, lesion side: 29 (59%) right-sided hemiparesis and 20 (41%) left-sided hemiparesis, level of severity: average value was 13 (SD 1) according to NIHSS. In both groups the speech therapy scheduled once a day focused on the treatment of communication disorders; rehabilitation exercises scheduled twice a day aimed at the reconstruction of damaged physical functions of the trunk, arms and legs. In addition, targeted physiotherapy orofacial treatment was given in the experimental group once a day, including rehabilitation of myofascial structures of the face, breathing rehabilitation and targeted facilitation of facial functions using the elements of orofacial regulation therapy, which seeks the creation of physiological function in the orofacial areas by applying pressure, touch, vibration and traction in specific points on the face activating the orofacial muscles (16). A clinical evaluation was performed at the beginning of therapy and after 4 weeks of therapy. Facial movement was assessed using the HBGS standardized clinical questionnaire (3) and by device measurement - two-dimensional (2D) video analysis, which measured changes in the distance of control points on the paretic corner of the mouth and earlobe (13, 15), mental functioning was evaluated according to the BDI-II (11). This blind study was conducted to measure the distribution of data from experimental and control groups. Basic statistics (arithmetic mean, standard deviation - SD) were calculated for individual parameters. The data were statistically verified using single-factor analysis of variance for repeated measures with statistical significance set at p < 0.05; as a subsequent post-hoc test the Fischer LSD test was used to compare individual groups in repeated measurements. Furthermore, the correlation of facial movement changes with mental function was tested using the Spearman correlation coefficient at p < 0.001. RESULTS: Our results showed a substantial improvement in functions of facial movement in both groups. Statistically significant improvement of facial movement was observed in the experimental group. The evaluation of results by HBGS (Table I) and 2D video analysis showed changes in length 177 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 measurement between the corner of the mouth and earlobe after the 4-week treatment (Table I). A significant difference in the mean values HBGS before and after rehabilitation in the experimental group was 1.66 (SD 0.55), in the control group it was 0.59 (SD 0.57). A significant difference in the mean input and output values of changes in distances between corner of the mouth and earlobe in experimental group was 11.5 (SD 3.50) mm and 2.0 (SD 2.30) mm in the control group. Statistically significant improvement of the condition in the experimental group can be seen again in the evaluation of mental functions according to BDI-II (Table I). A significant difference in the mean values BDI-II before and after rehabilitation in the experimental group was 14.3 (SD 5.1) and in the control group 6.9 (SD 5.1). Avery close relationship with a positive Spearman correlation coefficient value of 0.69 (p < 0.001) was found in the correlation of changes in facial movement and psychological functions. DISCUSSION: Our study demonstrated significant positive results in patients treated with targeted orofacial rehabilitation. Significant facial movement improvement of two and more degrees according to HBGS was observed after 4 weeks in 31 cases (62%); a facial movement improvement by one degree according to HBGS was found in 18 cases (36%). The condition remained unaltered in 1 case (2%), and there was no upset in the experimental group. Unlike the control group, in experimental group there was spontaneous improvement by two degrees or more in 2 cases (4%), a slight improvement in one grade occurred in 20 cases (40.8%), an unaltered state remained in 28 cases or 55.2%. Similar results were obtained by Svensson et al. in their study comparing the effect of mimic EMG biofeedback in 23 patients after stroke with a control group of 12 patients without EMG mimic therapy (17). In their study they observed the recovery of facial functions after 1 month in both groups, and there were normal facial functions or only mild dysfunctions after 6 months in two-thirds of patients. Patients with right-sided facial disability had significantly better results than patients with left-sided facial disability. Furthermore, in their study, Svensson et al. provide the same functional state of facial movement (according to HBGS), sensitivity and awareness of facial asymmetry in both experimental and control groups 6 months after the inception of stroke. Based on this finding the authors in conclusion did not recommend mimic EMG biofeedback therapy in patients after stroke with n. VII paresis. They predicted spontaneous remission of central n. VII paresis. It should be noted that this study was conducted on a relatively small group of patients and the results did not reach statistical significance. In comparison with Svensson et al., our study involved a sufficiently large group of patients with statistically significant results confirming the positive effects of orofacial physiotherapy with central paresis after stroke. In assessing depression after stroke using the BDI-II we again find significant improvement in mental functions in the experimental group, with 45 cases (90%) showing significantly improved mental state; 5 cases (10%) remained unaltered and no cases showed an impaired condition. In the control group we observed improvement in 29 cases or 60%; in 20 cases (40%) the condition remained unaltered and no cases showed an impaired condition. In both groups all patients used SSRI class antidepressants (citalopram 10 or 20 mg / day) in the effective prophylactic or therapeutic dose recommended by the psychiatrist.. Depression after stroke (post-stroke depression - PSD) occurs in 40-60% of patients (6-9). Patients with depression after stroke have a significantly poorer self-sufficiency prognosis, worse rehabilitation effect, worse quality of life, longer hospitalization period, and impaired ability to return to the home environment (6, 7, 10). Women have greater difficulty accepting the facial change and orofacial rehabilitation, which plays an important role (9, 10). Mikulik and Svensson et al. suggested that in 178 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 a small number of patients there is spontaneous alteration in facial movement and PSD remission, without treatment (9, 17). In contrast, studies by Roth et al. and Rim et al. are associated with better modification of cognitive function and neurological deficit including central paresis of the facial nerve in patients with PSD treated with antidepressants and psychotherapy (6, 7). The most significant negative prognostic factors influencing the mental function and quality of life of patients after stroke were repeated stroke attacks, old age of patients, immobility, urine and stool incontinence, cognitive dysfunction, and impaired ability to communicate (18-23). In the "central type" of n. VII paresis the aim of orofacial therapy is to relax spastic muscles, restore selective functions of orofacial muscles and re-educate fundamental facial movement and communication (verbal and non-verbal) features, and functions during food intake. In conclusion, orofacial rehabilitation as a part of complex rehabilitation care contributes considerably to improving the quality of life after stroke with orofacial function disorder. After complete stabilization of basic life functions and after improving the overall functional state, orofacial rehabilitation is one of the most important aspects of rehabilitation for the patient. Our study confirmed the positive effect in orofacial function improvement after 4 weeks - improvement of facial movement and alleviation of depression in patients after stroke with the central n. VII paresis who had - in addition to physiotherapy and speech therapy - targeted orofacial therapy. APPENDICES: Table I. Before After Difference Group 1 Group 2 Group 1 Group 2 Group 1 Group 2 Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) HBGS 3.74 (0.63) 3.69 (0.65) 2.08 (0.63) 3.10(0.71) 1.66 (0.55) 0.55 (0.57) SP 66.0 (4.0) 64.0 (4.0) 55.0(4.0) 62.0(3.7) 11.5 (3.5) 2.00 (2.3) BDI-II 35.7 (5.7) 34.9 (6.3) 21.4(4.2) 28.0(6.3) 14.3 (4.5) 6.90 (5.1) Table I - legend: Before .. .mean value before rehabilitation, After ... mean value of HBGS score after rehabilitation, Difference ... difference in the mean values before and after rehabilitation. Group 1 ... experimental group, Group 2 ... control group HBGS ... score values according to HBGS, SP ... distance between corner of the mouth and earlobe in mm assessed by 2D video analysis at maximal voluntary mouth pouting, BDI-II ... score values of depression according to BDI-II REFERENCES: 1. Kalita Z. Acute stroke. Prague: Maxdorf; 2006. 2. Amber Z. Neurology. Prague: Charles University; 1999 [in Czech]. 3. House JW, Brackmann DE. Facial nerve grading system. Otolarynol. Head Neck Surg 1985; 93: 146-147. 4. Yen TL, Driscoll CL, Lalwani AK. Significance of House-Brackmann facial nerve grading global score in setting of differential facial nerve function. OtolNeurotol 2003; 24: 118-122. 5. Reitzen SD, Babb JS, Lalwani AK. Significance and reliability of House-Brackmann Grading System for regional facial nerve function. Otolarzngol Head Neck Surgery 2009; 2: 154-159. 179 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 6. Rima MD, Murali R, Aisha Sh, Aparna Sh. Poststroke Depression. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 2008; 1: 13-21. 7. Roth J, Preiss M, Uhrova T. Depression in neurology. Prague: Galen; 1999 [in Czech]. 8. Bilge C, Kocer E, Kocer A, Türk Börü U. Depression and functional outcome after stroke: effect of antidepressant therapy on functional recovery. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2008; 1: 13-18. 9. Mikulik R. Organic depression in patients after stroke. In: Depression in neurology. Prague: Galen; 2001. p. 22- 30 [in Czech]. 10. Aben I, Verhey F, Lousberg R, Lodder J, Honig A. Validity of The Beck Depression Inventory, Hospital anxiety and Depression scale SCL-90 and Hamilton depression rating scale as instruments for depression in stroke patients. Psychosomatics 2002; 43: 386-393. 11. Beck AT, Steer AR, Bown GK. The Beck Depression Inventory - Second Edition. Manual. San Antonio 1996, TX: The Psychological Corporation. 12. Dozois DJ, Dobson K, Ahnberg JL. A psychometric evaluation of the Beck Depression Inventory -II. Psychological Assessment 1998; 2: 83-89. 13. Janura M, Zahalka F. Kinematic analysis of human movement. Universitas Palackianae of Olomouc, 2004. 14. Janura M. Application of 3D videography in the analysis of movement. Acta universitatis Palackianae Gymnica 1998; 1: 28-30. 15. Carter JA, Pomeroz VM, Richrds J. The feasibility of kinematic measure of lip closure during meaningful speech. Disabil Rehabil. 2000; 18: 820-826. 16. Castillo Morales R. Die Orofaziale Regulationstherapie. München, Berlin, Heidelberg: Pflaum; 1998. 17. Svensson BH, Christiansen LS, Jepsen E. Treatment of central facial nerve paresis with electromyography biofeedback and taping cheek. A controlled clinical trial. Ugeskr Langer. 1992; 50: 3593-3596. 18. Jongbloed L. Prediction of function after stroke: a critical review. Stroke 1986; 17: 765-776. 19. Vanaskova E, Krajickova D, Tosnerova V. Rehabilitation after stroke in department of neurology. Ces a Slov Neurol Neurochir 1996; 92: 33-39 [in Czech with English abstract]. 20. Vanaskova E, Tosnerova V, Milacek Z, Waberzinek G, Bukac J. Prediction of clinical tests and stabilography for patients after stroke. Ces a Slov Neurol Neurochir 2002; 98: 245-249 [in Czech with English abstract]. 21. Heinemann AW, Linacre JM, Wright BD, Hamilton BB, Granger CV. Prediction of rehabilitation outcome with disability measures. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1994; 75:133-143. 22. Pettersen R, Dahl T, Wyller TB. Prediction of long-term functional outcome after stroke rehabilitation. Clin Rehabil. 2002; 2:149-159. 23. Williams LS, Weinberger M, Harris LE, Biller J. Measuring quality of life in away that is meaningful to stroke patients. Neurology 1999; 8: 1839-1843. MUDr. Petr Konečný, Ph.D. Head Department of Rehabilitation Nemocnice Milosrdných bratří, Polní 3, 639 00 Brno Czech Republic 180 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 DEVELOPMENT OF BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENTS KONEČNÝ, L., KOCOURKOVÁ, J., SIEGELOVÁ, J., DOBŠÁK, R, KOHZUKI, M. Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Brno, Czech Republic Department of Sport Medicine and Rehabilitation, St. Anna Teaching Hospital, Brno, Czech Republic, Tohoku University of Sendai, Japan INTRODUCTION Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune, progressive, degenerative, chronic, diffuse, inflammatory and demyelinating disease that affects the central nervous system (Edwards, 2002; Havrdová, 2009). Central myelin damage and subsequent damage of the exposed axons, their collapse and loss, are primarily caused as a result of autoimmune mechanisms. The volume of damage and loss of axons is proportional to the disability affected by MS (Havrdová, 2009). MS has a number of clinical manifestations. The most visible of them is motor dysfunction. Patients themselves, however, consider fatigue, incontinence and sensory dysfunction, such as paresthesia and dysestesia, to be more unpleasant. Other functions of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), such as sexual functions and sudomotoric functions, are also affected. Impaired autonomic regulation of cardiovascular functions is often overlooked (Březinová et al., 2004). Autonomic cardiovascular regulation can be evaluated by means of baroreflex sensitivity (BRS). Examination of baroreflex sensitivity is a method which determines the baroreflex function, and thus the level of regulation of cardiovascular autonomic control (Tank et al., 2000). Baroreflex arc ensures short-term stabilization of blood pressure (Závodná, 2007), especially when changing body position (Fráňa, 2007). Previous investigations of BRS showed that a higher degree of clinical disability can be influenced by an impairment of baroreceptors in the cardiovascular regulation of blood pressure (Konečný et al., 2008; Konečný 2010; Kocourková 2011). AIM OF STUDY Assessment of the state of autonomic control of blood circulation in a group of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) in the 3-year period of the disease, measured by sequencing method of baroreflex sensitivity of heart rate (BRS). SET OF PATIENTS There was examined a group of 8 patients with clinically confirmed MS disease in remission (n = 8, mean age 41.8 ±8.1 years, height 1.7 ± 0.1 m, weight 65.3 ± 12.5 kg, length of illness 7.1 ± 7.1 years; degree of clinical disability EDSS 2.3 ± 1.1; 7 patients with a relabs-remitting form of MS) in the year 2007. The observed group of patients had a consistent set of pharmacotherapy in the form of corticosteroids and immune-modulating drugs. No internal or metabolic disorder and manifest disease of the autonomic nervous system was shown, which could affect results of baroreflex sensitivity. The monitored group of patients was repeatedly examined in the year 2010 (n = 8, mean age 45.5 ± 7.9 years, height 1.7 ± 0.1 m, weight 68.4 ± 8.3 kg, length of illness 8.8 ± 5.9 years; degree of clinical disability EDSS 2.3 ± 1.4; 5 patients with a relabs-remitting form of MS and 3 patients with a secondary progressive form of MS). 181 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 METHODS The clinical examination was performed to determine the degree of clinical disability. The level of disability was measured by Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS). EDSS (Kurtzke's Expanded Disability Status Scale) is a standard scale for evaluation of disability of MS patients. Itis a neurological examination with evaluation by 0.5 point, in the interval from 0 (no functional disorder or impairment) to 10 (death because of MS), impact of MS disease being on 8 basic functional systems. Status of cardiovascular autonomic regulation was examined by sequential method of BRS as follows. Noninvasive continuous recording of heart rate and blood pressure was made by beat-to-beat method of TASK FORCE MONITOR (CNS System, Graz, Austria). 5-minute recording was made in a supine position with spontaneous and controlled breathing. Metronome-controlled frequency of breathing was 0.33 Hz. Obtained record of heart rate and blood pressure was further processed by software-sequential analysis. The aim of sequential analysis is to find a sequence up or down with at least three consecutive monotonous increases or decreases of systolic blood pressure (SBP) with a deflection of at least 1 mm Hg during one beat of R-R intervals of QRS complex. Software processing of continuous recording of heart rate and blood pressure by sequential analysis of BRS was analyzed: R-R interval [ms], heart rate [beat/min], systolic and diastolic blood pressure [mm Hg], number of sequences (BRS events) and the absolute value of baroreflex sesitivity [ms/mm Hg] (BRS slope mean). Monitored indicators obtained from the examination years 2007 and 2010 were compared statistically. RESULTS Comparison of monitored indicators from 2007 and 2010 has not detected objective anamnestic or clinical worsening in the observed group of patients (EDSS 2.3 ± 1.1 vs. 2.3 ± 1.4). No significant changes in pharmacotherapy were found in the three-year period. The absolute value of baroreflex sensitivity examined in 2007 was 12.3 ± 7.4 ms/mm Hg and in 2010 it was 11.0 ± 8.4 ms/mm Hg. Summary of BRS results (f 0,33 Hz) are shown in Table 1. Table 1 Monitored values Examination in 2007 Examination in 2010 P RRI[ms] 818,09 ± 105,18 863,09 ± 107,85 NS HR [beat x min"1] 75,08 ±9,32 71,98 ±8,25 NS SBP [mm Hg] 111,55 ± 12,80 110,80 ± 8,17 NS DBP [mm Hg] 74,73 ±10,13 75,59 ±4,73 NS BRS events Up events 9,00 ± 7,09 8,13 ±6,94 NS Down events 11,63 ±9,97 11,13 ±7,72 NS Total number of events 20,63 ± 16,61 19,25 ± 13,92 NS BRS slope mean Up events [ms/mm Hg] 13,03 ± 8,44 15,04 ± 8,44 NS Down events [ms/mm Hg] 11,65 ±6,53 10,19 ±6,73 NS Total number of events [ms/ mm Hg] 12,33 ± 7,42 11,02 ± 8,35 NS Notes: values are given as means and standard deviations; BRS events - number of sequences, mean BRS slope - the value of BRS, p - statistical significance of 0.05; NS - statistically non-significant change; RRI - RR interval; HR - heart rate, SBP - systolic blood pressure, DBP - diastolic blood pressure. 182 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 DISCUSSION The total number of measured sequences and the absolute value of BRS in both spontaneous and metronome-controlled breathing were decreased between 2007 and 2010, but the difference was not significant. The absolute values correspond to BRS reference range for the average age of the studied cohort (41.8 ± 8.1 years vs. 45.5 ± 7.9 years; Tank et al., 2000). Studies of McDougall and McLeod (2003) indicate that abnormalities in autonomic control of cardiovascular system are closely associated with a more severe multiple sclerosis disease course and with the secondary progressive form of the disease. The clinical form of MS and EDSS of disability were not changed, as well as BRS in the study. Baroreflex acts as a short-term regulator of blood pressure. Sources of information are baroreceptors located in the wall of the aorta. The elasticity of blood vessels is therefore very important for their functionality. Semrád et al. (1998) and Tank et al. (2000) presented that elasticity decreases with age and physiological reference values for BRS decrease with age too. Due to the average age of our studied set of patients (41.8 ± 8.1 years vs. 45.5 ± 7.9 years) mean BRS should be in the range 9 ± 4 ms/mm Hg. The reduced level of BRS is a risk factor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. In essential hypertension (Honzíkova and Fišer, 2009, Siegelová et al. 2004) the BRS is decreased. It could be the changed function at the level of baroreceptors, which are not optimally stimulated because of wall rigidity of arterial vesels. The above mentioned two works point to the coincidence of increased blood pressure and reduced BRS, Fleming et al. (1994) presents a study which compared the diagnoses for which the patients were hospitalized. They compared the group of patients with MS with the group of persons of the same average age and gender. The results of this study showed that the patients with MS were clinically stable during three years. Vita et al. (1993) and Acevedo et al. (2000) argue that in multiple sclerosis patients the cause of this impairment could be demyelination in the brainstem and in the descending pathways of ANS. Symptoms of cardiovascular dysfunction occur less frequently than cardiovascular dysfunction itself. Therefore Acevedo et al. (2000) points to the fact that just the presence of cardiovascular dysfunction may be a prognostic factor in the development of MS. CONCLUSION Sequential analysis of BRS has not detected significant changes in parametres of baroreflex sensitivity in the monitored set of patients after three years of control testing. Clinical stabilization of MS disease in this set of patients does not suggest the development of any negative changes in autonomic control of baroreflex function during a three-year period of the MS disease. Key words: multiple sclerosis, baroreflex sensitivity Support MSM0021622402 REFERENCES 1. EDWARDS, S. Neurological Physiotherapy. 2. London: Churchil Livingstone, 2002. 293 s. ISBN 0-443-06440-7. 2. BŘEZINOVÁ, M., GOLDENBERG, Z., KUČERA, P. Autonomic nervous system dysfunction in multiple sclerosis patients. Bratislavské lékařké listy. 2004, 105, 12, s. 404-407. 3. HAVRDOVÁ, E. Roztroušená skleróza. 2. Praha: Maxdorf, 2009. 96 s. ISBN 978-80-7345-187-5. 4. FRAN A, P. Hodnocení krátkodobých změn srdeční frekvence a krevního tlaku u pacientů s esenciální arteriální hypertenzí. Brno, 2007. 93 s. Dizertační práce. Masarykova univerzita. 183 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 5. HONZÍKOVA, N.; FIŠER, B. Baroreflex sensitivity and essential hypertension in adolescents. Physiological research. 2009, 5, s. 605-612. 6. ACEVEDO, A.R., NAVA, C, ARRIADA, N., et al. Cardiovascular dysfunction in multiple sclerosis. Acta neurologica Scandinavica. 2000, 101, s. 85-88. 7. FLEMING, S.T., BLAKE, R.L. Patterns of comorbidity in elderly patients with multiple sclerosis. Journal of clinical epidemiology. 1994, 10, s. 1127-1132. 8. KOCOURKOVA, J. Autonomní regulace kardiovaskulárního systému u pacientů se sclerosis multiplex vyšetřovaná metodou baroreflexní senzitivity. 55. Studentská vědecká konference. MU Brno 2011. ISBN 978-80-210-5483-7 9. KONEČNÝ, L., et al. Baroreflex sensitiviy in multiple sclerosis. Scripta medica. 2008, 81, 4, s. 231-238. 10. KONEČNÝ, L. Autonomní nervový systém upacientů s neurologickým onemocněním: sclerosis multiplex. Brno, 2010. 156 s. Dizertační práce. Masarykova univerzita. 11. McDOUGALL, A.J.; McLEOD, J.G. Autonomie nervous system function in multiple sclerosis. Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 2003, 215, s. 79-85. 12. SEMRÁD, B.; FIŠER, B.; HONZÍKOVA, N. Ageing and cardiac autonomic status. In MALIK, M. Clinical guide to cardiac autonomic tests. Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1998; s. 285-300. 13. SIEGELOVA, J., HOFIREK, L, FIŠER, B., et al. Pulse pressure, baroreflex sensitivity and intima media thickness (FMT) in patients with essential hypertension under therapy. Scripta medica. 2004, 77, s. 297-302. 14. TANK, J., BAEWSKI, RM., FENDER, A., et al. Reference values of indices of spontaneous baroreceptor reflex sensitivity. American journal of hypertension [online]. 2000, 3 [cit. 2011-03-15], s. 268-275. Dostupný také z WWW: . 15. TASK FORCE The European Society of Cardiology and The North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology. Heart rate variability - Standards of Measurement, Physiological Interpretation, and Clinical Use. European Heart Journal 1996; 17: 354-381. 16. VITA, G., FAZIO, M.C., MILONE, S., et al. Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction in multiple sclerosis is likely related to brainstem lesions. Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 1993, 1, s. 82-86. 17. ZAVODNA, E. Fyziologické a patologické změny citlivosti baroreflexu u člověka. Brno, 2007. Ills. Dizertační práce. Masarykova univerzita. Mgr. Lumír Konečný, Ph.D. Dept. of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Kamenice 5 625 00 Brno, Czech Republic 184 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 ASSESSMENT OF ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN PATIENTS WITH CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES: EFFECTS OF EXERCISE TRAINING AND ELECTROMYOSTIMULATION Dobšák P.,a Shirai K., Pochmonová J., Homolka P., b Vítovec J., b Spinarová L., cNováková M.,d Dušek L.,d Jarkovský J.,e Eicher J.-C, Wolf J.-E, Siegelová J. Department of Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation, St. Anna Faculty Hospital and Masaryk University of Brno, Czech Republic a Department of Internal medicine, Sakura Hospital, Medical Center, Toho University, Chiba, Japan b Ist Department of Internal Medicine, St. Anna Faculty Hospital and Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic institute of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic dInstitute of Biostatistics and Analyses, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic eCentre de Cardiologie Clinique et Interventionnelle, CHU1 du Bocage, Dijon, France ABSTRACT Transcutaneous electromyostimulation (EMS) has been established as alternative to conventional exercise training (ET) in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF); however, the role of ET or EMS on the reduction of arterial stiffness in patients with CHF or with coronary artery disease (/CAD) has not been studied yet. Methods. Patients with stable CHF (mean age 58.9 (2.1) years; mean EF 31 (4.2) %, NYHA II-III) were randomly assigned into 2 groups: a) group EXE (n = 37) underwent 12 weeks of bicycle ET (3x40min a week); b) group EMS (n = 35) performed 12 weeks of EMS of leg extensors (frequency 10Hz, mode "20s on - 20s off), 2x60min/day. V02peak, heart rate variability (HRV) parameters and cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI) were evaluated before and after RHB program. Another part of this study focused on the effect of ET on arterial stiffness in patients with CAD (n=16; mean EF 55.0 ± 10.2%; mean age 61.5 ± 10.6 years) Results. Both types of RHB reduced significantly the CAVI value [group EXE from 9.6 (0.2) to 8.9 (0.2), p<0.012; group EMS from 9.3(0.2) to 8.7(0.2), p<0.013]. In the group with CAD the CAVI value decreased after 12 weeks of ET from 9.1 ± 1.4 to 8.8 ± 1.6, however, without statistical significance. Conclusion ET or EMS has been shown to improve significantly arterial stiffness in patients with moderate and stable CHF. A clear tendency to improvement was also present in patients with CAD. This study highlighted also the importance of exercise training on risk reduction in patients with cardiovascular diseases. KEYWORDS heart failure - electrical muscle stimulation - heart rate variability - big-endothelin - arterial stiffness INTRODUCTION The incidence of chronic heart failure (CHF) in populations of European countries is 0.4-2%. The disease has overall bad prognosis and its diagnostics and therapy are demanding, from medical as well as economical point of view. Neurohumoral hyperactivation is a typical symptom of failing heart 185 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 [1]. Resulting endothelial dysfunction is a concurrence of hypercoagulation, vasoconstriction, oxidative and pro-inflammatory processes which potentiate one other [2]. These pathological changes in patients with CHF have immense impact especially on skeletal muscles where devastating structural and metabolic changes and extensive atrophies take place [3]. The exact reasons for global damage of skeletal muscles in patients with CHF have not been fully elucidated yet, however, most probably combined effect of anti-inflammatory cytokines and increased sympathetic activity are responsible [4]. Demonstrable relationship between increased tonus of sympathetic nervous system, decreased fitness and bad prognosis has been proved [5]. Therefore a careful evaluation of autonomic nervous system (ANS) balance is of great importance for assessment of heart failure stage [6]. The care of patients with CHF is very complex and rehabilitation (RHB) plays an important role in it [7]. Supervised physical training could reverse the pathologic changes in patients with CHF and there have been many reports from past two decades clearly demonstrating the benefits of exercise on functional capacity, skeletal muscle performance and ANS regulation [8,9]. Although there is well working network of local facilities ensuring controlled cardiovascular rehabilitation program in most European countries, it is not possible to guarantee full RHB for all patients with less advanced form of CHF at present, despite the fact that these are patients who might mostly profit from it. The reasons are mainly socio-economical, e.g. distance from home address, financial situation or transportation expenses, but also insufficient motivation and age. Therefore it is important to lay standing emphasis on search of alternative forms of RHB. Recently, noteworthy new data about successful application of a rehabilitation alternative, the transcutaneous low-frequency electromyostimulation (EMS), in patients with CHF have been published [10,11]. Using direct electromyostimulation of big muscle groups, almost the same effective changes in CHF patients can be reached as with classical fitness exercising. EMS causes significant increase of aerometabolic capacity, total fitness and muscle force as well as quality of life [12]. Existing objective proofs of EMS effectiveness in patients with CHF are base of hypothesis that this method may beneficially affect not only functional parameters but also defective vegetative functions which are accompanying sign of congestive heart failure. Recently, a new parameter of arterial stiffness has been introduced into clinical practice, s.-c. cardio-ankle vascular index or CAVI [13,14]. CAVI reflects stiffness of the wall of aorta, femoral and tibial arteries as a whole in direction heart - ankles. Very valuable fact is that CAVI is blood pressure independent parameter. The values of CAVI were studied in healthy humans as well as in various so-called life-related diseases in past. It has been conclusively proved that CAVI value increases with age and that increased values are typical mainly for patients with increased coronary risk, such as coronary artery disease (CAD), hypertension, diabetes melli-tus, chronic renal insufficiency or metabolic syndrome [15]. However, systematic evaluation of CAVI changes in patients with chronic heart failure or CAD in European population has not been done yet. AIM This study was undertaken to assess and to compare the effects of 12-weeks exercise training and electromyostimulation on arterial stiffness and selected biochemical parameters in patients with stabilized form of CHF. PATIENTS & METHODS Patients with CHF Seventy-two patients (58 men, 14 women) with stable form of CHF (NYHAII/III - 49/23) with standard pharmacological treatment (ACEI, P-blockers, diuretics and statins) were randomly divided into 2 groups. Pharmacotherapy was not changed during rehabilitation program. The CHF etiology was ischemic heart disease (57 cases) and dilatation cardiomyopathy (15 cases). 186 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Protocol of exercise training (group EXE) Patients (n = 37) underwent supervised combined exercise training at the clinic. Combined training consisted of two phases - aerobic and resistance training. Aerobic training of interval type (lmin of work - 2min of relaxation) was performed for 40 minutes on electromagnetically braked bicycle er-gometers (REHAE900, Ergoline®, Bitz, Germany) with the intensity at the level of individual anaerobic threshold. This type of training was performed only for the first 2 weeks. During next 10 weeks the time of aerobic training was shortened to 20min and resistance training (20min) was added. The resistance training contained three standard exercises: pulley lifting, kicking-off and bench-press. The load for resistance training was always assessed individually using entrance test 1-RM (one repetition maximum). Before the start with power lifting training, all patients were instructed how to manipulate with powerlifting machines and all of them underwent practice how to prevent Valsalva manoeuvre during exercising. Initially, the intensity of exercise was set to 30% 1-RM and then it was increased up to 60% 1-RM (this intensity was kept during the rest of training period). Each of three powerlifting elements was always repeated in three series 10 exercises each (one minute rest was inserted between the series). Each training session lasted always 60min (warming introductory phase lasting lOmin, physical training - 40min and final lOmin phase of relaxation in supine position). The realization of the exercise training was done under supervision of medical staff (doctor, physiotherapist and nurse). The training sessions were performed 3 times a week (Monday - Wednesday - Friday, at the same time period 10:00 AM), for the total period of 12 weeks. Protocol of EMS application First testing application of EMS was done in all 35 patients of this group in hospital under medical supervision; 12-lead resting ECG and basic hemodynamic parameters (BP and HR) were monitored. Effective and clinically successfully tested stimulation protocol described previously has been used in this study [16]. The quadriceps and calf muscles of both legs were stimulated using self-adhesive surface electrodes 80x130mm (PALS® Platinum, Axelgaard Manufacturing, Denmark) and the battery-powered stimulator (Rehab X-2, Cefar®, Sweden). EMS was performed 2 x 60 min/day, 7 days a week and for 12 consecutive weeks. Stimulation parameters were set up as follows: biphasic current of 10Hz frequency, "on-off' mode stimulus (20s stimulation, 20s rest) and maximal stimulation amplitude 60mA. All patients underwent two 60-minutes applications of EMS at the clinic under medical supervision. Blood pressure and heart rate values were monitored during these periods in order to evaluate reaction of hemodynamic parameters to EMS. Next, during the period of home stimulation, patients visited the clinic once a week to check the stimulators and to measure resting values of blood pressure and heart rate. At baseline and after 12 weeks of the given type of rehabilitation, all patients underwent spiroergometric test for the evaluation of exercise performance. Spiroergometry was performed by all patients according to a standardized protocol by Wasserman et al. (2005 - 17). The test was done at progressively increasing working rate (lOW/min) to the maximal tolerance level on an electromagnetically braked bicycle ergometer (Ergoselect, Ergoline®, Bitz, Germany). Heart rate was monitored continuously using 12-lead electrocardiograph (AT-104 PC, Schiller®, Baar, Switzerland), and blood pressure was measured manually every 2min. The peak workload was recorded; oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide production were calculated breath-by-breath (Power Cube, Ganshorn® Medizin Electronic, Niederlauer, Germany), interpolated, and averaged over 10-s periods. Blood gases were analyzed during the whole exercise and the recovery period (5min). Peak oxygen uptake (V02peak) and oxygen uptake at anaerobic threshold (V02AT) were determined according to the method by Wasserman et al. [17]. V02peak represents maximal minute volume which may be given by myocardium and at the same time also maximal amount of oxygen which can be extracted by tissues. Decreased aerometabolic capacity of organism may be classified according to identification of functional damage based on s.-c. Weber scale [18]. 187 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 CAVI assessment CAVI was measured by VaSera® 1500 device (Fukuda Denshi Co, Tokyo, Japan) using standard protocol [19]. Examination was performed in supine position. Four pressure cuffs were placed on limbs, 1 microphone (phonocardiogram) above upper margin of sternum and 2 ECG leads on both upper limbs. CAVI was automatically calculated according to following formula: CAVI = a [{2p x 1/(SBP - DBP)} x In {(SBP/DBP) x PWV2]} + b (p = blood density; a and b = constants) In order to minimize adverse effects of cuff inflation on blood flow dynamics, the pulse waves were recorded only when the cuffs were inflated to the pressure lower than the diastolic one (50mmHg). Blood pressure (BP) on limbs was measured by oscillometric method; values of systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP) and pulse pressure (PP) were obtained from record of BP on right a.brachialis. Patients with ankle-brachial index (ABI) lower than 0.9 were excluded from this study. Biochemistry In order to evaluate possible influence of the given type of rehabilitation on the homeostasis, the plasmatic level of big-endothelin (big ET-1) and other selected biochemical parameters (serum lipids and CRP), was assessed. Plasma big-endothelin measurement was done using an immunometric (i.e., sandwich) method ELISA (Biomedica® Group, Vienna, Austria). Patients with CAD In a separate trial performed in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) we evaluated the effect of supervised exercise training on the arterial stiffness. Arterial stiffness was assessed by the parameter CAVI according to the protocol which was described previously. Sixteen patients (8 men/8 women; mean EF 55.0 ± 10.2%; mean age 61.5 ± 10.6 years) attended the study. Supervised exercise training took place 3 times a week for consecutive 12 weeks. The exercise protocol was identical to the protocol used in patients with CHF and 1 training session lasted 60 min. Statistical data analysis [20]. Estimates of arithmetic mean and standard error were used as standard summary statistics describing obtained primary data. Prior to any parametric data processing, we verified normality of sample distribution (Shapiro-Wilk's test) and homogeneity of variance (Levene's test). Pearson's correlation coefficient was used as a measure of mutual correlation between parameters as well as between the differences in values due to experimental exercise. Repeated measure ANOVA model was applied as principal method evaluating outcomes of experiments with model design including both experimental groups (EXE, EMS as independent, effect components) and sampling in different time points (as dependent, pair-wise component). Greenhouse-Geisser correction was applied to correct violation of sphericity assumption in case of testing repeated measures effect. For detailed mutual comparison of experimental variants with control group, Dunnet's post hoc test (independent comparisons) and pair-wise t-test (pair-wise comparisons) were used. Statistical analyses were computed using SPSS 19.0.1 (IBM Corporation, 2010). A value p < 0.05 was accepted as boundary of statistical significance in all applied tests. Ethics All patients signed informed consent to participate in the study. The study was approved by the local Ethics Committee and conforms to the principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and to the GCP guidelines of the European Community. 188 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 RESULTS Patients with CHF There was no significant difference in any parameter at baseline in both studied groups. This indicates baseline comparability of the experimental groups. Initial characteristics of patients in the two experimental groups (EXE, EMS) are outlined in Table 1. Table 1 Initial characteristics of patients in both experimental groups of patients with CHF Parameter1 Exercise group (N = 30) EMS group (N = 31) P value 2 Age (years) 60.7 (1.5) 58.1 (2.1) 0.112 Men/women 24/6 24/7 0.718 LVEF(%) 32.5 (2.3) 29.2(3.1) 0.358 NYHA 24/6 25/6 0.413 CAVI 9.6 (0.2) 9.3 (0.2) 0.061 BMI 29.3 (0.7) 28.0 (0.7) 0.184 HRrest (beats/min) 80.1 (4) 78.6 (5)0.305 Systolic BPrt(mmHg) 112.0(6.1) 115.3 (4.8) 0.243 Diastolic BPrest (mmHg) 73.2 (5.3) 75.5 (4.3) 0.187 Pharmacotherapy ACE inhibitors 26 27 - ACE inhibitors 18 21 - diuretics 27 27 - digoxin 4 5- 4 5 - statins 25 24 - 1 Categorical data are described by absolute number and percentage of patients in given category; continuous variables are described by mean (SE.) 2 Statistical significance of differences between groups is tested by ML-c2 test for categorical data and by t-test for continuous parameters. A statistically significant improvement of initial values of CAVI was detected in both experimental groups (in group EXE from 9.6 (0.2) to 8.9 (0.2); P < 0.012; in group EMS from 9.3 (0.2) to 8.7 (0.2); P < 0.013. This represents a decrease of-6.8% in group EXE and -5.7% in group EMS. The obtained results may be interpreted as improvement (decrease) of vascular wall stiffness due to long-lasting (12-weeks) regular physical loading of skeletal muscles (Fig. 1). 189 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Fig.l CAVI at baseline and after 12 weeks of given type of exercise training in 2 experimental group after 12 weeks of RUB Twelve weeks of exercise training or electrical stimulation decreased significantly the plasmatic levels of big-endothelin and CRP, while the serum lipids values remained without significant change but within physiological values (this finding is very probably related to the effect of chronic treatment by statins). The results of the evaluation of selected biochemical parameters are summarized in Table 3. Table 3 Biochemical parameters at baseline and after 12 weeks of given type of exercise training in 2 experimental groups of patients with CHF Experimental results1 Differences 2 parameter1 group baseline 12th week value % of values at baseline p value4 big-endotelin5 EXE 1.1 (0.05) 0.9 (0.05) -0.1 (0.05) -12.8% 0.014 (pmol/1) EMS 1.2 (0.10) 0.9 (0.05) -0.3 (0.10) -23.0% 0.001 p value3 0.962 CRP5 EXE 8.5 (3.2) 3.4(2.1) -5.1 (2.5) -60% 0.039 (mg/1) EMS 7.2 (3.4) 2.5 (1.9) -4.7 (2.7) -65.3% 0.043 p value3 0.567 LDL5 EXE 2.62 (0.7) 2.16(0.4) -0.46 (0.2) -17.6% 0.065 (mmol/1) EMS 2.93 (1.3) 2.67 (1.0) -0.26 (0.7) -8.9% 0.088 p value3 0.771 HDL5 EXE 1.22 (0.3) 1.24 (0.3) 0.02 (0.01) 1.6% 0.665 (mmol/1) EMS 1.30 (0,4) 1.28 (0.5) -0.02 (0.01) -1.5% 0.421 p value3 0.634 TAG5 EXE 1.72 (0.9) 1.58 (0.8) -0.14(0.2) -8.1% 0.198 (mmol/1) EMS 2.00 (0.8) 1.82 (0.9) -0.18(0.3) -9.0% 0.113 p value3 0.584 1 Arithmetic mean and standard error (SE) 2 Pair-wise differences expressed as difference arithmetic mean (standard error) and as % of initial value 3 Significance level of independent component in rm ANOVA model 4 Significance level of pair-wise (time-related) component in rm ANOVA model 5rm ANOVA model computed using log-transformed data; trimmed mean used for parametric data description in these variables 190 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 Patients with CAD At the end of rehabilitation program a slight decrease of CAVI (from 9.1 ± 1.4 to 8.8 ± 1.6) was present, however, without statistical significance (Fig.2 and 3). Nevertheless, the tendency to improvement of the arterial stiffness could be considered as a positive influence of regular physical activity on an important cardiovascular risk factor (a decrease of CAVI value below 9.0 is considered as a reduced risk). Fig. 2 CAVI at baseline and after 12 weeks of aerobic exercise training in patients with CAD Fig. 3 CAVI at baseline and after 12 weeks of exercise training in patients with CAD (women vs. men) 191 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 DISCUSSION This study compared effects of supervised fitness training and EMS in home conditions in patients with stabilized form of CHF (NYHA II-III) and in group of patients with CAD. The main and in actual scientific literature still sporadic topic of this study was the evaluation of the effect of physical exercise or EMS on changes in arterial wall stiffness expressed as CAVI parameter. This study is apparently the first one which deals with this problematic and brings unique results. The observed significant improvement of CAVI confirms very probably the positive effect of 12 weeks of exercise training or EMS on arterial stiffness in patients with moderate CHF. Arterial wall stiffness is a significant factor determining the prognosis of cardiovascular diseases. It is well know that decreased elasticity results from dramatic structural changes which precede formation of atherosclerotic plaque or thrombus in arteries. The crucial fact is that CAVI reflects the condition not only of elastic, but also of muscular arteries [21]. It means that CAVI value is affected by smooth muscle cells activity in arterial wall, where a number of vasoconstriction (angiotensin II, tromboxan A2, endothelin, etc.) as well as vasorelaxation factors (NO, prostacyclin, natriuretic peptide, etc.) acts. It has been proven that arterial stiffness is closely related to diastolic function of left ventricle in patients with cardiovascular risk factors [22,23]; both these studies showed that CAVI is positively correlated to peak early diastolic trans-mitral flow velocity, E/A, and deceleration time of the early diastolic trans-mitral flow velocity (E-DT). Another study brought the finding that CAVI significantly increases in patients with decreased diastolic function of left ventricle (LV) and increased value of CAVI is independently connected to diastolic dysfunction of left ventricle [24]. It means that if diastolic function of left ventricle correlates to vascular elasticity (reflected by CAVI), then high CAVI may signalize worsened diastolic function of left ventricle. The existence of these relationships will have to be studied and proven. We believe that there is large number of reasons for diagnostic as well as prognostic use of CAVI in patients with CHF. Pathophysiologic processes of chronic heart failure are sufficiently known at present. One of the characteristic symptoms is massive production of inflammatory and vasoactive substances which can trigger smooth muscle cells contractions or initiate remodelation of vessel wall. Therefore it is probable that these biosignals generated by endothelium may increase CAVI also in patients with CHF. According to some recently published studies CAVI may reflect occurrence of global inflammatory reaction of vessels in whole organism. Wakabayashi et al. [25] reported that CAVI increases with plasmatic level of C-reactive protein, amyloid A, sialic acid, fibrinogen and number of leukocytes in diabetes mellitus type 2. However, the mechanisms which cause increase of CAVI under these conditions are not fully elucidated yet. Nevertheless, CAVI may be applicable complementary tool for monitoring of CHF development and for monitoring of potential changes of vascular system caused by therapy. Due to regular physical activity vasoconstrictory substances as well as anti-inflammatory cytokines are reduced; detailed review by Gademan et al. [26] gives evidence that exercise training not only increases baroreflex sensitivity and HRV, but also decreases plasmatic level of catecholamines, angiotensin II, vasopressin and brain natriuretic peptide. Vasoconstrictory substance endothelin is considered an important factor of defect vasodilatator reaction in microcirculation of skeletal muscles in chronic heart failure. Its pathological effects on muscles stability have been proven [27]. Increased plasmatic activity of endothelin is one of the causes of low tolerance of workload and worsening of prognosis in patients with heart failure [28]. Precursor of endothelin is big-endothelin which expresses overproduction of this substance better than circulating endothelin itself because it is quickly degraded [29,30]. It is clear that it is very important to reduce increased activity of vasoactive and pro-inflammatory substances in patients with CHF. Also it is necessary to emphasize enormous importance of regular fitness training which can significantly reduce the level of neurohumoral substances [31,32]. Physical load represents therefore very strong anti-inflammatory impulse reducing catabolic 192 NONINVASIVE METHODS IN CARDIOLOGY 2011 wasting processes connected to CHF progression [33]. Only limited number of studies is focused on the effect of EMS on markers of anti-inflammatory activation or vasoconstrictory substances. E.g. Karavidas et al. [34] reported decrease of representative markers of anti-inflammatory activation (TNF-alpha, interleukins IL-6 and IL-10, adhesive molecules sICAM-1 and sVCAM-1) after 6 weeks of EMS in 42 patients with CHF. No reports are available on analysis of EMS effects on the level of endothelin or big-endothelin in patients with CHF. Only a few papers are available at present focusing exclusively on the effect of fitness training on levels of endothelin in patients with CHF. Kobayashi et al. [35] observed insignificant decrease of endothelin level as a result of exercising as compared to control group. Callaerts-Vegh et al. [36] found improvement of peak oxygen intake due to 8-weeks fitness training in patients with CHF; however without significant effect on endothelin level. Similar results brought also the study by Spinarova et al. [37] where the trend to decrease of big-endothelin was observed in group of exercising patients with CHF in comparison to group of non-exercising after two months of fitness training. In past 20 years, several authors reported that electromyostimulation induces profound structural and metabolic changes in the stimulated muscles and increases the number of fatigue resistant (slow-oxidative) fibers [38]. Direct electromyostimulation promotes higher work intensity than any type of exercise because the electrical stimulus bypasses the hierarchic physiological recruitment and activates all motor units simultaneously [39]. Muscle contractions triggered by electrical impulses activate the sequence of metabolic and vascular processes very similar to those which accompany normal muscle activity. Resulting reactive hyperemia and increased NO production promote vasodilatator signaling and may counterbalance the sympathetic overactivity and cytokine production [40]. These conclusions are supported by two recent clinical studies which describe significant improvement of endothelial functions by EMS in patients with CHF [41,42]. Regarding the fact that similar benefits as by standard exercise were achieved by electromyostimulation, we supposed that EMS (as a form of exercise training) could positively affect the neuro-humoral overactivity and decrease the arterial stiffness. Our postulate proved true and it was also clearly visible in the results of this study. It is fully justified in believing that EMS is dynamic developing up-to-date method in rehabilitation of chronic diseases. According to recent literature, EMS effectively prevents the development of protein catabo-lism in the course of post-operation period [43] and significantly increases effectiveness of clearance during hemodialysis in patients with chronic renal insufficiency [44]. CONCLUSION It is necessary to emphasize two essential facts which were brought in this study: 1) both methods may affect health conditions of patients with CHF comparably and EMS may be applied safely and effectively at home (without professional medical supervision), 2) based on obtained experience CAVI assessment may be recommended as fast and noninvasive way of monitoring of changes in cardiovascular system in patients with CHF or CAD. 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