Title | Insulin resistance and carotid intima-media thickness mediate the association between resting-state heart rate variability and executive function: A path modelling study. | ||
Author | Kemp, Andrew H; Lopez, Santiago Rodriguez; Passos, Valeria M A; Bittencourt, Marcio S; Dantas, Eduardo M; Mill, Jose G; Ribeiro, Antonio L P; Thayer, Julian F; Bensenor, Isabela M; Lotufo, Paulo A | ||
Journal | Biol Psychol | Publication Year/Month | 2016-May |
PMID | 27090849 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation + expend | 1.University Hospital and Faculty of Medicine, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil; School of Psychology & Discipline of Psychiatry, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. Electronic address: a.h.kemp@swansea.ac.uk. |
BACKGROUND: Research has linked high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV) to cognitive function. The present study adopts a modern path modelling approach to understand potential causal pathways that may underpin this relationship. METHODS: Here we examine the association between resting-state HF-HRV and executive function in a large sample of civil servants from Brazil (N=8114) recruited for the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil). HF-HRV was calculated from 10-min resting-state electrocardiograms. Executive function was assessed using the trail-making test (version B). RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Insulin resistance (a marker of type 2 diabetes mellitus) and carotid intima-media thickness (subclinical atherosclerosis) mediated the relationship between HRV and executive function in seriatim. A limitation of the present study is its cross-sectional design; therefore, conclusions must be confirmed in longitudinal study. Nevertheless, findings support that possibility that HRV provides a \'spark\' that initiates a cascade of adverse downstream effects that subsequently leads to cognitive impairment.