(More) Heart Rate Variability
Heart rate variability (HRV) measures the time intervals between adjacent heart beats. When you sit down for the 3 minute reading in our office, the HRV instrument reads your pulse and the skin temperature of your hand. From this data, the computer is able analyze how your autonomic nervous system is functioning. By looking at both resilience and the balance between sympathetic (fight/flight) and parasympathetic (rest/digest) tone, this reliable, non-invasive, and quick scan provides some really important information about how you have been and are currently able to adapt to stress.
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) coordinates the vital functions of your body, such as heart rate, blood pressure, digestion, and sweating. The ANS has three branches, two of which are easily mapped to the spine: sympathetic and parasympathetic. The sympathetic nervous system is activated when we encounter actual or perceived danger - this is the fight/flight response we feel when distressed. This part of the ANS originates in the thoracic spine (where your ribs are). The parasympathetic nervous system regulates rest and repair and originates in the upper neck and lower back (sacrum).
HRV measures the balance between sympathetic and parasympathetic tone. Like the gas and brake pedals in your car, both are important and neither should be activated all of the time. We often consider stress as having a negative connotation. What may be stressful for one person is energizing for another. I think it depends on the person and the context. Running for exercise because you want to is different than running for exercise because you are forced to, which is also different than running away from a bear. Eustress refers to “good stress” - activities which are taxing to the body and mind, but that contribute to health. Whether we consider an event or activity as eustress or distress depends largely on how well balanced the ANS is and how much energy is available to adapt.
When talking about the ANS, the energy available to adapt to stress is called resilience.
Resilience is the reserve energy in our bodies that allows us to prepare for, recover from, and adapt in the face of stress, adversity, trauma, and challenge.
Resilience varies based on the the environment and how adaptive and flexible your nervous system is. HRV measures the resilience of the ANS, which is why it is such a useful tool for chiropractic. Chiropractic facilitates the flexibility, adaptive capacity, and resilience in nervous system by directly addressing areas in the spine that are limiting the flow of energy between the brain and the body. Chiropractic is one of the ways you can positively influence your HRV. My 2021 blog post about HRV contains references and goes into more detail about this technology, as well as six ways to support the nervous system.
Two years and many scans later the most important things I have found both professionally and personally to improve HRV are meditation/contemplative practice, regular chiropractic care, and time in Nature. Our ability to adapt to the inevitable and increasing stressors that life presents depends on the tone and tension of the nervous system. HRV reflects our capacity to adapt to stress. Being able to measure this capacity is an invaluable tool. It provides a window into health and a way to track progress over time.
To learn more about this technology and how it relates to the work we do in the practice, click here.
Lessons from the Heart
In a time of so much noise, one of our biggest challenges is to find signal. In a sea of information - what is meaningful, what is true, what is clarifying? The question of what we choose to center is an important one. Luckily, we have to listen no further than our own heart to hear something vital.
Let us consider what the physiology of the heart might teach us about love and connection.
The heart is the vital center of our physical body, ever sending and receiving the life blood of our being. The potential action of all cells in the body depends on a phenomenon we would do well to acknowledge: depolarization. As charged particles exchange across the membrane of a cell, the electrical gradient shifts, triggering a cascade of events that allow cells to do their work. Without exchange, the membrane becomes a wall, polarity escalates, and the environment becomes hostile to healthy and coordinated life. The next part is just as important: the gradient inverts, the ions efflux, repolarizing the membrane to allow the cycle to occur again. The ebb and flow of ions, the collection and powerful release of blood from the heart, the trade of oxygen and carbon dioxide within the lungs, the breath in, the breath out - all a rhythm and a dance reflecting the universal principle of exchange.
The muscle cells within the human heart are special. Unlike smooth and skeletal muscle cells, their features allow them to synch together. The lub-dub of a healthy heart is a song of coordinated depolarization and the harmonized opening and closing of the valves that maintain the fluid boundaries within the chambers. Heart cells are also special in that they will beat on their own. However, the rate, rhythm, and strength of a heartbeat is a conversation (another exchange) between the nervous system and the heart itself. We can tune into and read this conversation when we measure heart-rate variability.
By design, the heart is a powerful, steady, and receptive organ. What better seat for the uniting and harmonizing force of Love to reside within the body? On a day when we will see hearts everywhere, let us remember what the physiology of the heart tells us about depolarization, receptivity, and vital exchange. Happy Valentine’s Day!
Heart Rate Variability
Each February, I offer current and prospective practice members an opportunity to measure how well their autonomic nervous system is currently adapting to stress (Click here to request more info or to schedule an HRV study). I use Heart Rate Variability (HRV) as an assessment tool to determine what their resting baseline state is. This allows us to see how they index sympathetic (fight/flight, defensive physiology) with parasympathetic (rest/digest, recuperative physiology) tone. It also allows us to get a read on how resilient their physiology is, which is a measure of the ability to withstand and recover from difficult conditions. This information is important both clinically, as it helps me to better understand and guide care, and personally, as it provides a quantitive measure of an important physiological marker.
HRV looks at the interval between successive heart beats to determine how much variation is being expressed. Like any other biometric, too much or too little variation indicates the body is working harder since it has moved outside the range of baseline normal to highly adaptive. There are several devices that offer HRV tracking as wearable tech, which are used by folks to determine when to train (or rest). Most recently, information from these wearables has been analyzed to see if HRV changes can predict immune system outcomes related to the pandemic. By contrast, the instrument and system I use in my office employs a 3 minute resting capture that collects heart rate data as well as skin temperature and galvanic skin response. These additional measurements help build a more complete assessment of autonomic regulation and ensure accuracy of collection. To be clear - the HRV used in my chiropractic office is an assessment of autonomic nervous system function used to teach people about their bodies and guide practice members in their health and wellness journey. It is not used to diagnose or treat viral or other pathogenic diseases.
“If the first two decades of the 21st century have taught us anything, it is that uncertainty is chronic, instability is permanent, disruption is common, and we can neither predict nor govern events. There will be no new normal. There will only be a continuous series of not normal episodes defying prediction and unforeseen by most of us until they happen.” Jim Collins
The past year has been a tremendously trying time and has highlighted and underscored the need to reframe how we relate to uncertainty. When I consider the above quote, the word that comes to mind for me is adaptability. Adaptability is defined as the quality of being able to adjust to new conditions. If we agree with Jim Collins (and I do), then the ask here is clear: how do we learn to accept the nature of reality as being in constant flux while we learn to improve our ability to adjust to new and changing conditions?
Once you have some HRV data to work with, here are 6 ways that you can support your body and your nervous system, which have been shown to improve HRV:
Sleep - The body heals, the brain detoxes, mind rests. This is the primary way you communicate self-respect to your body and your spirit. Physiologically speaking, 8 hours is the minimum to allow your systems to refresh during a 24 hour period. The book and podcasts featuring Matthew Walker are great resources for more information.
Water - The many fluid tasks your body performs to cultivate health require adequate hydration. From blood pressure to lymphatic flow, liver, kidney, and skin detoxification to general digestion, we all need more water than we typically consume. The 2 guidelines that help me are 1) to have a designated bottle (or bottles) that I know is my minimum target to finish by day’s end and 2) to use either the dryness of my lips and/or the color of my urine to gauge hydration (clear to straw color is a good indicator).
Movement - The natural state of the human body is to be in motion. The casts we lock ourselves into in the form of desk chairs, car seats, couches, and the like are antithetical to providing the quantity and quality of movement our joints, muscles, fascia, circulation, and neurology need to be healthy. See my earlier post about the importance of a Movement Practice here.
Reduce Alcohol - Simply stated, alcohol depresses the function of the central nervous system. As with ANY chemical introduced into the body, set, setting, and dose determine experience and the relative benefit or detriment of consumption. Although it is easy (and likely true) to say that blanket abstinence is the best policy for physiological health, this misses the nuance of being able to intentionally and responsibly enjoy a beverage either for its craft or on the occasion to celebrate company. To wit, the measured benefit of alcohol seems to max out at the equivalent of 1 drink per day.
Nutrition - The quantity, quality, and relationship we have to what we consume directly impacts our health. A diet that is based on whole foods, organic products, a (colorful) diversity of offerings, and is locally sourced when possible will facilitate nutritional health. Other helpful notes are to try to eat at regular times each day, minimize refined sugar, and use high quality oils when cooking/preparing food. See my previous post about Consuming Consciously here.
Chiropractic - Last but certainly not least, chiropractic care has been shown to positively influence HRV. By working directly with the tone and tension of the nervous system, chiropractic adjustments help the body to up-regulate parasympathetic activity, move more effectively, and clear the central channel of the spine, which prompts the innate intelligence of the body to reboot and reorganize the patterns of stress held in the system. For more information see here, here, and here.
We use HRV as part of our objective measurements to track the progress of our practice members who receive care at Mutter Chiropractic. It is a valuable tool and a great way to open a conversation about ways to positively influence health, wellness, and adaptability.