In this episode, Matt Bennett explores how to apply the research on HRV training through muscle contraction into personal practice.
References for this episode.
Fred Shaffer's work: https://youtu.be/ajwgwzn2ZUo
Sources for this summary: Vaschillo/Lehrer et al., laboratory demonstration that 0.1-Hz rhythmic skeletal muscle tension increases 0.1-Hz power in heart rate, systolic pressure, and pulse transit time and strengthens HR–BP coupling, consistent with baroreflex resonance; includes with- and without-leg-crossing conditions (N≈37). ResearchGate Shaffer, Moss, & Meehan (2022) randomized study showing that one and six contractions per minute increased multiple HRV metrics versus twelve per minute, with a ~0.10-Hz peak at six per minute. SpringerLink Meehan & Shaffer (2023) within-subjects study showing greater HR, HR max–min, and low-frequency power when adding core contraction and leg-crossing versus wrist-ankle alone at six contractions per minute. SpringerLink Frontiers in Neuroscience review describing the resonance-frequency model and noting that rhythmic skeletal muscle tension, like slow breathing, can stimulate the baroreflex at ~0.1 Hz. Frontiers Clinical and physiological studies on leg-crossing and muscle-tensing maneuvers increasing cardiac output, mean arterial pressure, and cerebral oxygenation during orthostatic stress and vasovagal reactions. Europe PMC+2Physiology Journals+2 Systematic reviews and trials on isometric handgrip training showing blood-pressure reductions with mixed HRV effects, distinct from contraction-based biofeedback. Nature+1