Heart rate variability could be the key to improving your body’s response to stress. Here’s how to get started
Fortune · Nitat Termmee—Getty Images

Several years ago, migraines and anxiety were affecting Kate’s performance at work, and medications didn’t help. Her neurologist suggested breathing practices aimed at raising her heart rate variability, or HRV.

Kate, age 38, a finance analyst in Manhattan who requested the use of her first name only for privacy, learned that HRV refers to the time gaps between each heartbeat. Although the heart feels like a steadily beating drum, there are tiny changes in the lengths of these intervals, and people with more variation between each heartbeat tend to have better physical and emotional health.

New technologies are making it easier to measure and perhaps increase your HRV, and some of the companies behind them are joining forces.

What is HRV

The time in between heartbeats changes due to a balancing act between two branches of the nervous system that control some of the body’s most important activities. The sympathetic branch carries signals that help us respond to stressful challenges; it increases heart rate, sweating and other automatic, “fight or flight” reactions. The second branch, called parasympathetic, exerts the opposite force, slowing down the heartbeat when we need to rest.

Even when you’re not active or recovering, these two branches stay busy with every breath, speeding up your heartbeat during inhales and slowing it down as you breathe out. The more quickly your heartbeat changes in both directions, the higher your HRV, suggesting the nervous system is well balanced, capable of easily ramping up your energy and heart rate when needed—while running a 5K, for example—and just as good at helping you wind down right after the race or any other physical or emotional stressor.

Think of HRV like a tennis player, balancing weight from one foot to the other before returning serve. High HRV suggests you can head gracefully in either direction, primed to handle whatever life smacks your way.

Just as long as your HRV isn’t too high. “A person’s HRV is very individual,” says Tim Roberts, vice president of science and innovation at Therabody, which makes voice-guided breathing sessions for raising HRV. “You don’t want the trend to be too far out of your normal range.”

Lower HRV has been associated with shorter lifespan, obesity, cardiovascular disease, inflammation, mental health problems, and viruses.

Jessilyn Dunn, assistant professor in biomedical engineering at Duke,  found that HRV may drop when people get Covid-19, flu, or the common cold.  “There’s a combination of changes in HRV, resting heart rate, movement and sleep that together create a signature of infection,” Dunn says.