Many people are unaware that the natural fluctuations in heart rate are crucial for maintaining good health. Your heart shouldn’t beat at a constant rate throughout the day; instead, it should vary depending on whether you’re resting or exercising, feeling happy or angry, nervous or relaxed.
Chiropractic adjustments have been shown to influence heart rate variability.
Your brain is constantly monitoring your body’s status and responding to environmental changes by adjusting your heart rate. These variations are measurable and are referred to as heart rate variability (HRV). A high HRV is generally considered an indicator of a healthy heart and overall well-being.
Research that has been published about chiropractic care and heart rate variability (HRV) suggests that chiropractic adjustments do influence HRV and very importantly, in the stressful fast-paced life we often live these days, chiropractic care appears to increase the heal and calm side of our nervous system.
So, if you are interested in good health, adaptability and want to better respond to stress and your environment, Chiropractic Care may be worth considering.
Click on the video below to view an explanatory video on this topic.
Most people know that having a healthy heart rate is important. You don’t want your heart to beat too fast and you don’t want it to beat too slow. It should beat at just the right pace to provide your vital organs and muscles with the amount of blood and oxygen that you need to survive and thrive. What many people don’t know though, is that the natural variation in someone’s heart rate is also important. Your heart shouldn’t beat at a constant steady rate all day, it should vary based on whether you are resting or exercising, whether you are happy or angry, nervous or relaxed. Your brain is constantly detecting what is happening inside and outside of you and one of the ways it responds to changes in your environment is by increasing or decreasing your heart rate. These natural changes can be measured and are called your heart rate variability or HRV.
HRV is controlled by your nervous system, specifically the part of your nervous system that controls your automatic functions, like breathing and digestion, the things that we don’t have to think about doing, they just happen. A good HRV, is one that is high and is thought to indicate a healthy heart and body, one that is able to respond appropriately and adapt to its environment and needs.
For example, if you get a fright, or suddenly need to run really fast, your nervous system will quickly need to increase your heart rate, so it can pump enough blood to your muscles, so you can run. However, when you are sleeping or relaxed, you don’t want your heart to stay beating that fast, as this is not good for you, so your brain will perceive this and then decrease your heart rate.
In order for your nervous system to be able to increase or decrease your heart rate based on your needs, your brain needs to be able to properly sense what is going on in and around it. We know now, from a lot of neuroscience research studies, that when segments of your spine are not moving properly, what chiropractors call being subluxated, this changes the way your brain can sense what is going on in and around your body and the way it controls your body.1-3
Research has shown that when a chiropractor gently adjusts these subluxations, it helps your brain to more accurately ‘see’ what is going on in and around your body.4 5 So, when your chiropractor adjusts you, it might help you to be able to respond and adapt to your environment better and keep you balanced and healthy. This is why some chiropractors will measure your HRV when you’re under care… so they can see how well you’re adapting to your environment.
A group of researchers wanted to know more about chiropractic and HRV so they got 96 different chiropractors to measure HRV before and after a single adjustment session on some of their patients, and for some of these patients they measured their HRV over a course of 4 weeks of chiropractic care. Altogether, 539 adults had their HRV recorded before and after their adjustments and 111 had their HRV measured across 4 weeks of care. They found that in both of these groups, there were significant improvements in their HRV measurements and that in the group that was assessed over 4 weeks, these improvements were sustained 6.
When we put this study together with the other research that’s been published about chiropractic care and HRV it suggests that chiropractic adjustments do influence HRV 7 and very importantly, in the stressful fast paced life we often live these days, chiropractic care appears to increase the heal and calm side of our nervous system.
So, if you are interested in good health, adaptability and want to better respond to stress and your environment, why don’t you consider chiropractic care and make sure your spine is functioning well to operate at your optimal potential!