Skip to content

Impact of Meditation–Based Lifestyle Modification on HRV in Outpatients With Mild to Moderate Depression: An Exploratory Study

H. Bringmann, Martin Bogdanski, G. Seifert, A. Voss

Frontiers in Psychiatry June 9, 2022 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.808442 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

A meditation and yoga program called Meditation-Based Lifestyle Modification (MBLM) improved heart rate variability (HRV) in outpatients with mild to moderate depression, compared to standard treatment. HRV gains, reflecting better vagal tone, were seen in MBLM participants, while those receiving only medication showed almost no change. The findings suggest potential cardiovascular benefits from the MBLM program for this population.

Study at a glance

Design randomized controlled trial
Sample size 61
Population outpatients with mild to moderate depressive disorder
Key finding The MBLM program led to HRV gains in participants compared to standard treatment, while medication-only participants showed almost no change.

Abstract

Background The scientific evaluation of mind-body-interventions (MBI), including yoga and meditation, has increased significantly in recent decades. However, evidence of MBI's efficacy on biological parameters is still insufficient. Objectives In this study, we used HRV analysis to evaluate a novel MBI as a treatment of outpatients with mild to moderate depressive disorder. The Meditation-Based Lifestyle Modification (MBLM) program incorporates all major elements of classical yoga, including ethical principles of yoga philosophy, breathing exercises, postural yoga, and meditation. Methods In this exploratory randomized controlled trial, we compared the changes in HRV indices of a MBLM group (N = 22) and a minimal treatment group (MINIMAL, drugs only, N = 17) with those of a multimodal treatment-as-usual group (TAU, according to best clinical practice, N = 22). Electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings were derived from a Holter monitoring device, and HRV indices have been extracted from nearly stationary 20-min periods. Results Short-term HRV analysis revealed statistically significant differences in the pre-to-post changes between MBLM and TAU. In particular, the vagal tone mediating RMSSD and the Rényi entropy of symbolic dynamics indicated HRV gains in MBLM participants compared with TAU. Almost no alterations were observed in the MINIMAL group. Conclusions Our results suggest a benefit in selected HRV parameters for outpatients with mild to moderate depression participating in the MBLM program. For further investigations, we propose analysis of complete 24-h HRV recordings and additional continuous pulse wave or blood pressure analysis to assess long-term modulations and cardiovascular effects.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment