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Insulin resistance and carotid intima-media thickness mediate the association between resting-state heart rate variability and executive function: A path modelling study

•HRV is associated with executive function, but causal pathways remain to be examined.•Available evidence provides a framework on which potential mechanisms are explored.•Insulin resistance and atherosclerosis mediated the HRV-cognition relationship in seriatim.•Results support a regulatory role of...

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Published in:Biological psychology 2016-05, Vol.117, p.216-224
Main Authors: Kemp, Andrew H., López, Santiago Rodríguez, Passos, Valeria M.A., Bittencourt, Marcio S., Dantas, Eduardo M., Mill, José G., Ribeiro, Antonio L.P., Thayer, Julian F., Bensenor, Isabela M., Lotufo, Paulo A.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c453t-6f8515d73745464bc729bb936f525a05bc6cd506013cc9d1872ae8bc9d211bdb3
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container_title Biological psychology
container_volume 117
creator Kemp, Andrew H.
López, Santiago Rodríguez
Passos, Valeria M.A.
Bittencourt, Marcio S.
Dantas, Eduardo M.
Mill, José G.
Ribeiro, Antonio L.P.
Thayer, Julian F.
Bensenor, Isabela M.
Lotufo, Paulo A.
description •HRV is associated with executive function, but causal pathways remain to be examined.•Available evidence provides a framework on which potential mechanisms are explored.•Insulin resistance and atherosclerosis mediated the HRV-cognition relationship in seriatim.•Results support a regulatory role of vagal function over downstream processes. 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. 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). 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.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2016.04.006
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ispartof Biological psychology, 2016-05, Vol.117, p.216-224
issn 0301-0511
1873-6246
language eng
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subjects Adult
Brazil
Carotid intima-media thickness
Carotid Intima-Media Thickness - psychology
Cognition
Cross-Sectional Studies
Executive function
Executive Function - physiology
Female
Heart Rate - physiology
Heart rate variability
HOMA-IR
Homeostasis model assessment index for insulin resistance
HRV
Humans
IMT
Insulin Resistance - physiology
Male
Mediation analyses
Middle Aged
Models, Biological
Models, Psychological
Path modelling
TMT
Trail making test
title Insulin resistance and carotid intima-media thickness mediate the association between resting-state heart rate variability and executive function: A path modelling study
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