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Selank

Selanc, TP-7

Quick Stats
Studies 114
Trials 11
2016 pubmed

Sleep related bradyarrhythmic events and heart rate variability in apparently healthy individuals.

Çimen. Tolga T; Sunman. Hamza H; Erat. Mehmet M; Efe. Tolga Han TH; Akyel. Ahmet A; Bilgin. Murat M; Açıkel. Sadık S; Doğan. Mehmet M; Yeter. Ekrem E

Key Findings

  • Sinus pause group showed better HRV metrics than the Mobitz I AV block group
  • All time and frequency domain HRV parameters were higher in sinus pause subjects during day, night, and 24‑hour periods
  • Even after correcting for heart rate, total power and very low frequency remained higher in sinus pause group

Practical Outcomes

  • There’s no actionable information for selank users or biohackers from this paper. It simply highlights that different sleep‑related heart rhythm issues have distinct autonomic profiles, but it doesn’t suggest any new interventions or dosing strategies.

Summary

The study looked at healthy people who sometimes have slow heart rhythms while sleeping, comparing two types: sinus pauses and a mild AV block. It found that those with sinus pauses actually had better overall heart rate variability, a sign of healthier autonomic function, than those with the AV block. The research does not involve the peptide selank, so it offers no direct guidance for using selank or related biohacking protocols.

Abstract

It is thought that abnormal cardiac impulses of the autonomic nervous system during sleep are responsible for sleep-related bradyarrhythmias. Despite a proposed common etiopathogenesis and having common name of "sleep-related bradyarrhythmias," precise importance of sinoatrial or atrioventricular (AV) node involvement remains elusive. This study aimed to determine whether there is a difference in sleeprelated bradyarrhythmias from the point of view of heart rate variability (HRV). Patients were evaluated using 24-hour Holter electrocardiogram monitor. After careful medical evaluation, apparently healthy individuals with sleep-related sinus pauses ≥2 seconds on at least 1 occasion or those in whom Mobitz type I AV block occurred were included. Frequency and time domain analyses were conducted for daytime, nighttime, and 24-hour period. Total of 37 patients with sinus pause(s), 40 patients with Mobitz type I AV block(s), and 40 healthy controls were included. On HRV analyses, all time and frequency domain parameters were better in sinus pause group for daytime, nighttime, and 24-hour average (p<0.05 for all). Results of heart rate-corrected HRV analyses still showed significantly better total power (TP) and very low frequency (VLF) in the sinus pause group compared with AV block group (TP: 7.1x10-3 vs. 5.4x10-3, p=0.011; VLF: 4.9x10-3 vs. 3.7x10-3, p=0.007). Despite proposed common autonomic mechanisms, sleep-related sinus pause cases demonstrated better HRV profile in comparison with Mobitz type I AV block.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-11-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.14744/anatoljcardiol.2016.7300