HRV & Mental Health

Research on depression, anxiety, PTSD, trauma, and psychological well-being

Frontiers in Psychiatry 2024 Evidence: Works

HRV Biofeedback Shows Promise for PTSD Treatment

HRV biofeedback training is emerging as an effective adjunct treatment for PTSD, helping patients regain autonomic regulation. Studies show improvements in both HRV metrics and PTSD symptom severity after 8-12 weeks of training.

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Psychosomatic Medicine 2023 Evidence: Doesn't Work

Childhood Trauma Associated with Lower Adult HRV

Adults with histories of childhood trauma show persistently reduced HRV compared to those without adverse childhood experiences, even decades later. This may partly explain the link between early trauma and adult health problems.

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Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback 2024 Evidence: Doesn't Work

Depression Linked to Reduced HRV Across All Age Groups

A comprehensive meta-analysis confirms that depression is consistently associated with reduced HRV, with moderate effect sizes. This relationship holds across age groups and is bidirectional—low HRV may predict depression onset, and depression further reduces HRV.

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Psychophysiology 2024 Evidence: Doesn't Work

Anxiety Disorders Consistently Associated with Reduced HRV

Meta-analyses confirm that anxiety disorders (GAD, panic, social anxiety, PTSD) are associated with reduced HRV, with small-to-moderate effect sizes. This has implications for long-term cardiovascular health.

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npj Mental Health Research 2024 Evidence: Doesn't Work

HRV Changes Track Bipolar Episode Recovery

HRV is reduced during both manic and depressive episodes in bipolar disorder and improves as symptoms resolve, suggesting HRV may help monitor episode recovery in clinical settings.

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Military Medicine 2024 Evidence: Works

HRV Biofeedback Effective for Anxiety Treatment

Meta-analyses provide compelling evidence for HRV biofeedback as a treatment for anxiety, with improvements in both HRV metrics and anxiety symptoms observed across multiple studies.

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