Validity and Efficacy of the Elite HRV Smartphone Application during Slow-Paced Breathing

Sensors (Basel). 2023 Nov 29;23(23):9496. doi: 10.3390/s23239496.

Abstract

Slow-paced breathing is a clinical intervention used to increase heart rate variability (HRV). The practice is made more accessible via cost-free smartphone applications like Elite HRV. We investigated whether Elite HRV can accurately measure and augment HRV via its slow-paced breathing feature. Twenty young adults completed one counterbalanced cross-over protocol involving 10 min each of supine spontaneous (SPONT) and paced (PACED; 6 breaths·min-1) breathing while RR intervals were simultaneously recorded via a Polar H10 paired with Elite HRV and reference electrocardiography (ECG). Individual differences in HRV between devices were predominately skewed, reflecting a tendency for Elite HRV to underestimate ECG-derived values. Skewness was typically driven by a limited number of outliers as median bias values were ≤1.3 ms and relative agreement was ≥very large for time-domain parameters. Despite no significant bias and ≥large relative agreement for frequency-domain parameters, limits of agreement (LOAs) were excessively wide and tended to be wider during PACED for all HRV parameters. PACED significantly increased low-frequency power (LF) for Elite HRV and ECG, and between-condition differences showed very large relative agreement. Elite HRV-guided slow-paced breathing effectively increased LF values, but it demonstrated greater precision during SPONT and in computing time-domain HRV.

Keywords: autonomic; biofeedback; heart rate variability; parasympathetic; psychophysiology.

MeSH terms

  • Electrocardiography / methods
  • Heart Rate
  • Humans
  • Mobile Applications*
  • Respiration
  • Respiratory Rate
  • Smartphone*
  • Young Adult

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.