Grabbing the reins of Anxiety with HRV
Tracking and training Heart Rate Variability (HRV) can help control anxiety, improve health, and improve performance
Anxiety often gets confused with “stressed.”
The truth is they are very different. “Stress” is usually situational, and if the stressor is removed, then the stress goes away.
However, anxiety is typically chronic and ongoing, involving excess anticipation, worry, and fear about an unknown future outcome, event, or occurrence.
So, anxiety is very future-oriented, whereas stress is more tangible, focusing on here-and-now concerns.
Anxiety has related and more complex conditions like panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. It also shares many features with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, such as difficulty knowing what to focus on, what is a priority, and what is important, along with a great deal of distractibility.
Anxiety involves multiple brain checkpoints, including the limbic system, prefrontal cortex, basal ganglia, reticular activating system, and insular cortex.
These regions of the brain regulate body sensations, planning, interoception, executive functioning, filtering information, hormone release, and more.
A metric or bio-measure used to describe the balance of the nervous system is called Heart Rate Variability (HRV). This should not be confused with Heart Rate. As a clinician who treats many conditions involving nervous system balance, I have found HRV to be an invaluable tool for tracking and gaining control of health.
Heart rate variability (HRV) is controlled by the autonomic nervous system. In anxiety disorders, there is excessive corticotropin-releasing hormone and higher cortisol levels leading to sympathetic overdrive and underdrive of parasympathetic nervous system activity (called poor vagal tone).
Heart rate variability is defined as the amount of time between your heartbeats. It is controlled unconsciously by the autonomic nervous system, which has a sympathetic division and a parasympathetic division.
Heart rate variability is the variance in time between the beats of your heart. If your heart rate is 120 beats per minute, it does not mean that your heart is beating every .5 seconds. It may be beating 0.3 seconds between two beats, and then sometimes .7 seconds between others. The greater this variability, the higher the HRV.
HRV reflects how adaptable your body can be. People with high HRV are usually less stressed, less anxious, and happier.
Low heart rate variability is a sign of current or eminent health problems because it shows your body is becoming less resilient.
Low HRV is largely associated with Anxiety and related disorders in a metanalysis of over 2000 patients.
I explain more about HRV here:
I am fascinated by the applications of HRV in anxiety. Because it can be regulated by breathing exercises, herbal and conventional medication, biofeedback devices, meditation, and psychotherapy. If we can increase HRV then anxiety is more manageable. In truth its highly controllable.
There are several tools that I like to help with measuring HRV.
Many smartwatches have HRV applications such as GARMIN, Fitbit, and Apple watch. As do many Smart Rings like Oura Ring, Monavo, and Circular. There is a 2024 review available on smart rings here.
And there are many devices that give biofeedback and neurofeedback to effect your HRV like:
The inner-balance app by Heart Math
However, if you don’t want to monitor it it would be smart to at least learn breathing methods such as coherent breathing, 4–7–8 breathing square, or methods discussed on the oxygen advantage.
For more in-depth discussion on HRV , please listen in on the interview I did with Marco Altinin, PhD on my podcast.
And for an in-depth discussion of breathwork please listen to my discussion with Dr. Geoff Lecovin on Breathwork.
Since anxiety and related disorders are unique it may be helpful to look into genetic testing for mental health polymorphisms or neurotransmitter testing to identify ones unique neurotransmitter balance. There are validated questionnaires online that can determine the degree of depression, stress, or anxiety you have like the DASS-21 scale. As a functional medicine practitioner , I also use questionnaires like the HPA axis questionnaire that can also provide additional information.
From an herbal medicine perspective; I have accumulated some protocols that have herbs that help with raising serotonin, lowering glutamate, and raising GABA.
Some anxiety and stress is normal and adaptive; its when it is unchecked that life disruption, quality of life, and health effects may manifest.
In a world that feels so out of control . It is invaluable to have a practice or belief that let's go to a higher purpose, energy, or faith along with tools like meditation, breathwork, and prayer. HRV is a way to track and measure and possibly gain more control.