Background: Heart rate activity, specifically heart rate recovery and heart rate deceleration (HRD), is at the forefront of much public health. It is hypothesised that HRD post-exercise is linked to mortality and that a compromised HRD may be a powerful predictor of all-cause mortality.
Aims: This chapter examines the literature on Heart Rate
Deceleration (HRD) and its applications across both public health and sports
performance domains.
Methodology: This chapter includes a comprehensive analysis
of the limited research exploring HRD within public health and athletic
performance contexts. Selected literature included controlled comparative
trials across various exercise settings.
Results: While contemporary health and therapeutic
approaches often emphasise resting heart rate metrics and interventions,
post-exercise cardiac response may provide more valuable insights for health
practitioners and performance specialists. Heart rate recovery, or
deceleration, demonstrates significant associations with mortality risk and
athletic performance outcomes. Recent investigations have highlighted the role
of vagal activity in heart rate deceleration, establishing its value as both a
mortality risk predictor and an effective psychophysiological assessment tool
in competitive sports environments.
Conclusion: In conclusion, heart rate recovery dynamics
represents a promising field with significant implications for both public
health and athletic performance. The growing body of evidence linking HRD to
mortality risk and performance outcomes suggests that greater attention to this
aspect of cardiovascular function is warranted across clinical, fitness, and
sports performance settings. Future research should continue to explore the
mechanistic relationships between aerobic capacity, vagal tone, HRD, and both
health and performance outcomes.
Author (s) Details
Christopher K.
Carroll
Department of Human Kinetics and Applied Health Science, Bethel University,
USA.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/aodhr/v1/5438
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