Breathing exercises are categorized as a mind-body practice. One in ten adults in the U.S. use breathing exercises for health purposes. The aim of this project is to examine if different slow breathing has different physiological and psychological effects.
Breathing exercises are categorized as a mind-body practice. One in ten adults in the U.S. use breathing exercises for health purposes. Slow breathing exercises are commonly used for stress reduction. Higher stress is associated with higher cardiovascular risk. Effective and standardized breathing interventions for stress reduction have not been developed or well-studied. For centuries, mind-body practitioners have proposed that, in addition to breathing slowly, extending the length of exhale relative to inhale increases the dose of relaxation. Few studies have tested this belief. The aim of this proposal is to examine if slow breathing while extending the exhale time relative to the inhale time increases physiological and psychological relaxation. The slow breathing exercises to be studied are based on breathing techniques from yoga. This is a12-week study among healthy adults randomized to daily slow breathing exercises of: (1) exhale greater than inhale versus (2) exhale equal to inhale in length. The first aim of the studies will be to compare 12 weeks of slow breathing with exhale greater than inhale on physiological stress as measured through autonomic tone. The second aim will be to compare changes in psychological stress as measured through validated stress and anxiety questionnaires. The final and third aim will be to measure the correlation between changes in physiological and psychological stress. This project will test if specific breathing techniques produce measurable and meaningful differences in stress in both healthy and disease populations. Because stress reduction is considered the major mechanism of mind-body practices, these studies will advance the field of mind-body science.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
99
Slow breathing techniques from yoga
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Magnitude of Change in High Frequency Heart Rate Variability
This is a proxy measure of parasympathetic tone. In normal healthy adults, the average value is around 600 ms\^2 (miliseconds\*miliseconds). In hypertensive adults, the average value is around 100 ms\^2. In patients with autonomic failure (who lacks parasympathetic tone), the average value is around 20 ms\^2.
Time frame: Baseline
Magnitude of Change in High Frequency Heart Rate Variability
This is a proxy measure of parasympathetic tone. In normal healthy adults, the average value is around 600 ms\^2 (miliseconds\*miliseconds). In hypertensive adults, the average value is around 100 ms\^2. In patients with autonomic failure (who lacks parasympathetic tone), the average value is around 20 ms\^2.
Time frame: 6 weeks
Magnitude of Change in High Frequency Heart Rate Variability
This is a proxy measure of parasympathetic tone. In normal healthy adults, the average value is around 600 ms\^2 (miliseconds\*miliseconds). In hypertensive adults, the average value is around 100 ms\^2. In patients with autonomic failure (who lacks parasympathetic tone), the average value is around 20 ms\^2.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Magnitude of Change in PROMIS Anxiety Scale
Measure of psychological stress taken at baseline before any study intervention. The scale ranges from 0 (no anxiety) to 100 (maximal anxiety). In the normal adult population, the average of the PROMIS Cooperative Group. (2011). Item banks for measuring emotional distress from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Anxiety score is 50. A higher score correlates with increased anxiety and a lower score correlates with lower anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline
Magnitude of Change in PROMIS Anxiety Scale
Measure of psychological stress taken at baseline before any study intervention. The scale ranges from 0 (no anxiety) to 100 (maximal anxiety). In the normal adult population, the average of the PROMIS Cooperative Group. (2011). Item banks for measuring emotional distress from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Anxiety score is 50. A higher score correlates with increased anxiety and a lower score correlates with lower anxiety.
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Time frame: 6 weeks
Magnitude of Change in PROMIS Anxiety Scale
Measure of psychological stress taken at baseline before any study intervention. The scale ranges from 0 (no anxiety) to 100 (maximal anxiety). In the normal adult population, the average of the PROMIS Cooperative Group. (2011). Item banks for measuring emotional distress from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Anxiety score is 50. A higher score correlates with increased anxiety and a lower score correlates with lower anxiety.
Time frame: 12-weeks