# Expiration-Triggered Sinus Arrhythmia Predicts Mortality Risk in the General Elderly Population

**Authors:** Ralf Josef Dirschinger, Alexander Müller, Alexander Steger, Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz, Petra Barthel, Georg Schmidt, Daniel Sinnecker

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcdd12020040 · Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease · 2025-01-24

## TL;DR

Reduced expiration-triggered sinus arrhythmia (ETA) is linked to higher mortality risk in elderly people, even after accounting for traditional risk factors.

## Contribution

ETA is shown to predict mortality in the general elderly population, beyond classical risk factors.

## Key findings

- Abnormal ETA (≤0.19 ms) was associated with 6.9% 4-year mortality, compared to 3.7% in others.
- ETA remained a significant predictor in multivariable analysis (hazard ratio 1.81).
- Combining ETA and Framingham score stratified risk into low, intermediate, and high groups.

## Abstract

Reduced respiratory sinus arrhythmia, quantified as expiration-triggered sinus arrhythmia (ETA) from simultaneous electrocardiogram and respiration recordings, is a strong long-term mortality predictor in myocardial infarction survivors. Here, we investigated whether ETA also predicts mortality risk in the general elderly population. ETA was quantified from 30-min electrocardiogram and respiration recordings in 1788 general population subjects aged ≥60 years, who were then followed for a median of 4.0 years (median age 72 years, 58% female). Four-year all-cause mortality was 4.6%. Abnormal ETA using a predefined cutoff (≤0.19 ms) was associated with a 4-year mortality of 6.9%, compared to 3.7% in the remaining participants (p = 0.0022). ETA remained a significant mortality predictor in multivariable Cox analysis, also considering a modified Framingham score incorporating sex, age, smoking, cholesterol, blood pressure, antihypertensive medication, family history, diabetes and clinical atherosclerosis (multivariable hazard ratio 1.81; 95% confidence interval 1.17–2.81; p = 0.008). Combined risk prediction by ETA (using an optimized cutoff of ≤0.86 ms) and the Framingham score stratified patients into a low-risk (both parameters normal), an intermediate-risk (one parameter abnormal) and a high-risk group (both parameters abnormal), with 4-year mortality rates of 1.9%, 4.4% and 10.1%, respectively. We conclude that in elderly general population subjects, ETA is a mortality risk predictor that complements classical clinical risk stratification.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** myocardial infarction (MONDO:0005068), atherosclerosis (MONDO:0005311), diabetes (MONDO:0005015)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** myocardial infarction (MESH:D009203), diabetes (MESH:D003920), ETA (MESH:D001146), atherosclerosis (MESH:D050197)
- **Chemicals:** cholesterol (MESH:D002784)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856101/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11856101