Objective: This study investigates the hypothesis that the nonlinear component of human heart rate (HR) variability might show a periodic structure over the 24-h span. Such a postulate could explain how the chaotic component might coexist with the deterministic periodic variability of instantaneous HR in beat per minute.
Materials and methods: The sinusal R-R intervals (sRRi) of the Holter EKG of 10 clinically healthy subjects (5 M, 5 F, 23-30 years) were analyzed per each hour of the day-night span according to two methods for the nonlinear chaotic variability, i.e., the correlation dimension method, and the linear periodic variability, i.e., periodic regression analysis.
Results: The hourly-qualified correlation integrals were found to show a significant circadian rhythm, with an acrophase located during the night in coincidence with the longest duration of the sRRi and the lowest rate of cardiac pulse.
Conclusions: The rhythmic structure of the chaotic component of the human HR variability let us to think that a deterministic periodic chaos of fractal type regulates the nonlinear cardiac dynamics. Such a periodic structure allows the chaos to be compatible with the deterministic linear periodicity of circadian type which characterizes the within-day variability of human HR.