The Impact of Body Mass Index and Nutritional Status on Cardiac Electrophysiological Balance Using ICEB and ICEBc: A Cross-Sectional Approach
Fethullah Kayan, Ömer Faruk Alakuş, Mihriban Elçiçek, Serdar Soner, Cansu Öztürk, Geylani Güleken, Ihsan Solmaz

TL;DR
This study explores how body mass index and nutrition affect heart electrical balance, finding that overweight individuals show the most optimal balance.
Contribution
The study introduces ICEBc as a more sensitive marker for detecting electrophysiological changes related to obesity.
Findings
ICEB and ICEBc values differ significantly across BMI categories.
Overweight individuals exhibit ICEBc values closest to optimal physiological limits.
Higher ICEBc quartiles correlate with better nutritional status indicators.
Abstract
Background: The Index of Cardiac Electrophysiological Balance (ICEB) has emerged as a electrocardiographic marker reflecting the equilibrium between ventricular depolarization and repolarization. Although obesity is known to alter cardiac electrophysiology, the combined influence of body mass index (BMI) and objective nutritional status on ICEB and its heart rate-corrected form (ICEBc) remains insufficiently defined. This study aimed to investigate the associations between BMI categories, nutritional status, and cardiac electrophysiological balance. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 591 adult patients classified as normal-weight, overweight, or obese according to BMI. Electrophysiological assessment of ICEB (QT/QRS) and ICEBc (QTc/QRS) values was calculated from standard 12-lead electrocardiogram recordings. Participants’ nutritional status was analyzed using validated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control · Cardiovascular Function and Risk Factors · Heart rate and cardiovascular health
