This Week In HRV - Episode 19

06/01/2026 24 min Episodio 19

                    This Week In HRV - Episode 19

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Episode Synopsis


Episode Show Notes: This Week in HRV – January 2026
Welcome to the first episode of 2026! Today, host Matt Bennett explores ten groundbreaking studies that bridge the gap between autonomic health, mental well-being, and physical performance. From the cardiac strain of early psychosis to the "neuroimmune triad" in diabetes, we dive deep into the latest science of Heart Rate Variability.
Detailed Study Summaries
1. Myocardial deformation and pro-arrhythmic indices in first-episode patients with psychosis before and one year after the initiation of antipsychotic treatment
Authors: Marios Plakoutsis, Aris Bechlioulis, Aidonis Rammos, Spyridon Sioros, Andreas Karampas, Georgios Georgiou, Lampros K. Michalis, Katerina K. Naka, and Petros Petrikis. This study highlights that a first psychotic episode is a full-body stressor causing immediate autonomic imbalance. Even without prior heart disease, patients showed abnormal HRV and subtle weakening of heart muscle contraction. While treatment rebalances the autonomic system, it requires vigilant monitoring due to medication-induced QT interval prolongation.
2. Perception of effort decreases with motor sequence learning
Authors: Bahram Ghafari Goushe, Thomas Mangin, Benjamin Pageaux, and Jason L. Neva. Learning a new skill isn't just a brain-based phenomenon. This experiment shows that as a task becomes automated, the body stays calmer (higher RMSSD) and the subjective perception of effort drops, reducing the physiological "price" of performance.
3. Serum cytokine levels and heart rate variability in the frequency domain in patients with chronic Chagas heart disease
Authors: Reinaldo B. Bestetti Sr., Renata Dellalibera-Joviliano, Milton Faria Junior, Rosemary A. Furlan Daniel, and Cláudia C. Domingos. Focusing on the inflammatory reflex, researchers found that Interleukin-23 (IL-23) specifically correlates with reduced vagal tone in Chagas heart disease, suggesting this cytokine interferes with the nervous system's ability to regulate the heart.
4. Research on changes in psychological, physical fatigue and emotional states in the National Youth Orienteering Preparation Camp
Authors: Haiyan Li. Comparing athletes at an intensive camp to those training at home, this study proves that structured recovery (fixed hydration, rest, and mental skills training) leads to significantly better HRV adaptations and lower cortisol, preventing burnout despite high training loads.
5. Autonomic-inflammatory crosstalk in diabetic atherogenesis: a neuroimmune triad (HRV-LMR-hsCRP) predicts carotid plaque risk in type 2 diabetes
Authors: Xinrui Zhou, Xiaowei Bai, Li Ding, Shuai Zhang, and Ya Li. This paper introduces a practical "neuroimmune triad"—combining HRV with immune markers (LMR and hsCRP)—to accurately predict the risk of carotid plaques in diabetic patients, identifying those at highest risk for stroke.
6. Effect of Tai Chi and Qigong on Heart Rate Variability: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Examining Baseline Autonomic Function and Intervention Complexity as Moderators in Adults
Authors: Yasmine A. Gunawan, Mein-Woei Suen, Hanifa M. Denny, Ishita Chauhan, Milcha Fakhria, Siswi Jayanti, and Earl F.I. Mallari. A meta-analysis of 15 studies confirms that mind-body exercises improve HRV regardless of routine complexity. However, gains are largest for those who enter the practice with a relatively healthy baseline autonomic state.
7. Sympathovagal imbalance in drug-naïve chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients: a physiological mechanism to cope with the severity of airway obstruction in an observational study
Authors: Durgesh K. Gupta, Shibu S. Awasthi, Suman Gupta, and Himani H. More. In COPD, the body reflexively boosts sympathetic drive t...