# Heart rate variability, quality of life, and sleep quality in patients with epilepsy

**Authors:** Selcen Duran, Yalcin Boduroglu, Asuman Celikbilek

PMC · DOI: 10.1590/1806-9282.20250002 · Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira · 2025-08-08

## TL;DR

This study finds that people with epilepsy have lower heart rate variability and worse quality of life and sleep compared to healthy individuals, with drug-resistant epilepsy showing the worst outcomes.

## Contribution

This is the first study to investigate the relationship between heart rate variability, quality of life, and sleep in patients with epilepsy.

## Key findings

- Patients with epilepsy had significantly lower heart rate variability parameters compared to healthy controls.
- Quality of life in drug-resistant epilepsy was worse than in medically controlled epilepsy in several domains.
- Heart rate variability correlated with cognitive and emotional well-being in epilepsy patients.

## Abstract

Recent data have shown that patients with epilepsy experience reduced quality of life and poor sleep quality, which are also closely related to heart rate variability. For the first time, we investigated the relationship between heart rate variability and quality of life and sleep in patients with epilepsy.

Twenty-seven patients with medically controlled epilepsy, 23 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, and 36 healthy subjects were included in this cross-sectional prospective study. Heart rate variability analysis was conducted using a 24-h rhythm Holter device in all cases. The quality of life in epilepsy-31 questionnaire and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire were used for patients with epilepsy.

Compared to the control group, patients with epilepsy had lower heart rate variability parameters, including standard deviation of normal-to-normal, standard deviation of normal-to-normal index, standard deviation of the averages of the normal-to-normal, root mean square of successive differences, and percentage of NN Intervals >50 ms (pNN50) values (p<0.001). Heart rate variability parameters and sleep scores were similar between the drug-resistant epilepsy and medically controlled epilepsy subgroups (p>0.05). In addition, quality of life in epilepsy-31 subscores were significantly lower in drug-resistant epilepsy than in medically controlled epilepsy in the subdomains of seizure worry (p=0.001), overall quality of life (p=0.004), emotional well-being (p=0.005), and cognitive functioning (p=0.007). There was a significant positive correlation between standard deviation of the averages of the normal-to-normal and cognition (r=0.335; p=0.017); maximum QT and emotional well-being (r=0.286; p=0.046); and maximum QTc and emotional well-being (r=0.292; p=0.042) in patients with epilepsy.

We found that low heart rate variability was more common in patients with epilepsy. Quality of life was also highly impaired in drug-resistant epilepsy, and low heart rate variability correlated with low cognition and emotional well-being in patients with epilepsy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** epilepsy (MONDO:0005027)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** epilepsy (MESH:D004827), drug-resistant epilepsy (MESH:D000069279), seizure (MESH:D012640)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12341415/full.md

## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12341415/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12341415