Heart rate variability (HRV), an indicator of your body’s capacity to respond to stress, should be on your radar if you’re interested in maintaining optimal health. Put simply, HRV measures the variations in time between your heartbeats — a function controlled by your autonomic nervous system (ANS).
As such, HRV is said to be a “proxy of autonomic activity” that’s associated with executive functions, emotional regulation and more, including decision-making. Meanwhile, abnormal HRV can signal problems ranging from neurological to psychological conditions.1
HRV Measures Your Heart’s Resilience to Stressors
It’s important to understand that your ANS controls both your body’s sympathetic nervous system (SNS) — the part that triggers your “fight-or-flight” response — as well as its parasympathetic nervous system (PNS), which triggers the relaxation response.
Any type of external stressor — everything from an argument with a loved one to a night of lost sleep — will prompt a reaction from the ANS, which signals to your brain’s hypothalamus to either ramp up into overdrive or calm down. According to Harvard Health Publishing:2
“It [Your ANS] responds not only to a poor night of sleep, or that sour interaction with your boss, but also to the exciting news that you got engaged, or to that delicious healthy meal you had for lunch.
Our body handles all kinds of stimuli and life goes on. However, if we have persistent instigators such as stress, poor sleep, unhealthy diet, dysfunctional relationships, isolation or solitude, and lack of exercise, this balance may be disrupted, and your fight-or-flight response can shift into overdrive.”
HRV is typically analyzed using an electrocardiogram, or EKG, which can reveal that something’s off with your ANS. If you have low variation between heartbeats, it may signal that you’re stuck in fight-or-flight mode, whereas high variation between beats tends to signal a more relaxed state.3
Many wearable devices are also available to track your HRV. While they may not be as accurate as an EKG, they may still provide useful data, especially if you notice your HRV worsening over time.
HRV Is an Indicator of Heart Health
When you’re healthy, the two branches of your ANS — the SNS and PNS — are well-balanced. An imbalance in your SNS and PNS may be an indicator of heart disease. This has been appreciated since at least 1987, when researchers found decreased heart rate variability was associated with increased risk of death after a heart attack.
“The relative risk of mortality was 5.3 times higher in the group with HR [heart rate] variability of less than 50 ms [milliseconds] than the group with HR variability of more than 100 ms,” the team wrote.4 Prior to this, in 1965, researchers found that changes in heart rate variability occurred prior to fetal distress, even before changes occurred to the heart rate itself, signaling HRV’s clinical importance.5
It’s since been confirmed that a reduction in HRV is often seen in heart-related, and non-heart-related, conditions. For instance, according to research published in the journal Circulation, “Depressed HRV after MI [myocardial infarction] may reflect a decrease in vagal activity directed to the heart, which leads to prevalence of sympathetic mechanisms and to cardiac electrical instability.”6
Reduced HRV is also often seen in cases of heart failure,7 and it’s associated with levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), a measure of inflammation, in the blood.8
HRV May Predict Disease Development, Progression
HRV is a measure of your heart’s ability to respond to physiological and environmental stress stimuli. In short, a high HRV is a sign that your body is handling the stress well, whereas a low HRV indicates your body is under stress and at risk of disease or injury if proper balance isn’t restored. Writing in Behavioral Pharmacology, researchers from the University of Wales explained:9
“Whether by influencing inflammation or by other mechanisms, HRV has been associated with a range of diseases, in some cases predicting subsequent problems and in others being an index of disease progression.
As a generalization, a healthy biological system tends to be both variable and complex, characteristics that decline with disease. Irrespective of disease, HRV declines with age, reaching, in some older than 65 years of age, levels that are a risk factor for mortality.”
HRV has been linked to obesity10 and found to predict cardiac morbidity and mortality in people with diabetes, as well, and it’s been suggested that this is reflective of an impairment in ANS functioning that occurs early in the disease and gets progressively worse over time.11 HRV is also linked to mental health, with reductions seen a variety of psychiatric conditions, including:12
- Bipolar disorder
- Anxiety
- Post-traumatic stress disorder
- Schizophrenia
“Given the links between HRV, emotion regulation and executive functioning,” the University of Wales team noted, “it has been proposed that HRV is a transdiagnostic biomarker of mental illness.”13
Along these lines, 2023 research published in Psychology and Aging found a link between HRV and resilience to stress across the lifespan.14 Among people who were severely mistreated as children, those with higher HRV recovered from grief faster later in life after losing their spouse compared to those with lower HRV.
Brain health is also affected. Lower HRV is linked to poorer cognitive performance, and one study found it’s also associated with postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD), a type of cognitive impairment that occurs after surgery, and could even be used as an indicator of POCD risk.15
Lifestyle Affects HRV for Better or Worse
While disease processes are associated with HRV, so, too, are lifestyle choices, which suggests you can influence your HRV for better or for worse. As noted by the University of Wales team, omega-3 fats, B vitamins, probiotics, polyphenols, exercise and weight loss may benefit HRV, both in the short- and long-term, while consuming trans fats and high-glycemic carbohydrates may reduce it. They explained:16
“This brief overview illustrates that HRV is a risk for, or a marker of, a wide range of disorders. As such, any intervention that impacted positively on HRV has the potential to benefit health.
Evidence suggests that lifestyle may be one such factor … smoking cigarettes and drinking alcohol negatively influenced HRV, measured using linear (HF [high-frequency] power) and nonlinear (sample entropy) measures. In addition, these aspects of the HR time series were increased in those who took regular exercise and consumed a healthy diet.”
Even exposure to light at night may influence HRV. In March 2022, a study of 20 healthy young adults revealed that just one night of sleep with moderate light exposure increased nighttime heart rate, decreased HRV and increased next-morning insulin resistance.17
“These results demonstrate that a single night of exposure to room light during sleep can impair glucose homeostasis, potentially via increased SNS activation,” the researchers noted.18
Sauna Bathing, Controlled Breathing Improve HRV
While exercise is known to benefit HRV, sauna bathing can be used as an exercise mimetic (i.e., an exercise-mimicking tool) to benefit your health. This is evidenced, in part, by its ability to improve ANS balance and HRV after just one session.
In a study of 93 people with a mean age of 52 and risk factors for heart disease, HRV data were analyzed before, during and after a 30-minute sauna session, revealing significant benefits:19
“Time and frequency-domain HRV variables were significantly modified by the single sauna session, with most of HRV variables tending to return near to baseline values after 30 min recovery. Resting HR was lower at the end of recovery (68/min) compared to pre-sauna (77/min).
A sauna session transiently diminished the vagal component, whereas the cooling down period after sauna decreased low frequency power and increased high frequency power in HRV, favorably modulating the autonomic nervous system balance.
… This study demonstrates that a session of sauna bathing induces an increase in HR. During the cooling down period from sauna bathing, HRV increased which indicates the dominant role of parasympathetic activity and decreased sympathetic activity of cardiac autonomic nervous system.”
Controlled breathing, including nasal breathing such as that taught by the Buteyko method, is another important facet. One review suggests “autonomically optimized respiration” occurs with six to 10 breaths per minute and diaphragmatic activation. Further:20
“[N]asal breathing is also considered an important component of optimized respiration. This is easily achievable in most individuals with simple practice and there is yet to appear in the literature any documented adverse effects of respiration in the 6-10 breaths per min range.
Controlled, slow breathing appears to be an effective means of maximizing HRV and preserving autonomic function, both of which have been associated with decreased mortality in pathological states and longevity in the general population.”
The Best Way to Monitor Your Sauna Session
While sauna room temperature and session duration are useful starting points, the most accurate way to optimize your sauna session is to monitor your actual core body temperature using an oral digital thermometer. This personalized approach accounts for individual variations in heat tolerance, body composition, and acclimation status.
Research shows that the therapeutic benefits of sauna — including heat shock protein activation, cardiovascular improvements, and enhanced recovery — are triggered when your core body temperature rises to specific thresholds, not simply by the room temperature or time spent inside.
Since individual responses to heat vary significantly based on factors like body mass, hydration status, fitness level, and heat acclimation, using a thermometer gives you direct feedback on what matters most: your body's actual response.
• Target temperature guidelines — Using an oral digital thermometer:
◦Beginner target — Work toward reaching an oral temperature of 100°F (37.8°C)
◦Optimal target — Gradually progress to 101°F (38.3°C) for maximum heat shock protein activation
◦Do not exceed — 101.5°F oral temperature (38.6°C)
Important note on oral vs. core temperature — Oral temperature typically reads approximately 0.5°F to 1°F (0.3°C to 0.5°C) lower than true core (rectal) temperature. An oral reading of 101°F corresponds to a core temperature of approximately 101.5°F to 102°F (38.6°C to 38.9°C) — the range research associates with robust heat shock protein induction and therapeutic benefits.
• How to use this method:
1. Take your baseline — Before entering the sauna, record your oral temperature (typically 97.5°F to 98.6°F/36.4°C to 37°C).
2. Check periodically — Keep thermometer out of the sauna as it will prolong its life and give you better measurements. After 10 to 15 minutes in the sauna, or as soon as you feel hot, measure your temperature. Be sure to put thermometer outside the sauna after measuring your temperature.
3. Track your progress — First few weeks: Exit when you reach 100°F (37.8°C). After acclimation (2 to 4 weeks of regular use): You may extend sessions until reaching 101°F (38.3°C). Never exceed 101.5°F oral temperature.
4. Listen to your body — If you feel dizzy, nauseous, or unwell at any temperature, exit immediately regardless of the thermometer reading.
• The science behind these numbers:
• Heat shock proteins (HSPs) are activated when core temperature reaches approximately 38.5°C (101.3°F) or higher
• Research shows that time spent with core temperature ≥38.5°C correlates with greater HSP72 mRNA expression
• Core temperatures above 39.4°C (103°F) approach hyperthermia risk territory
• The 101°F to 101.5°F oral target keeps you in the therapeutic zone while maintaining a safety margin
• Why this beats room temperature alone — A 175°F traditional sauna may raise one person's core temperature to 101°F in 15 minutes while taking another person 25 minutes to reach the same point. Similarly, a 140°F infrared sauna session may be perfectly adequate for one person while insufficient for another. Your oral thermometer tells you what's actually happening in your body.
Quick Reference Summary
| Parameter |
Guideline |
| Measurement tool |
Oral digital thermometer |
| Beginner target |
100°F (37.8°C) oral |
| Optimal target |
101°F (38.3°C) oral |
| Maximum safe limit |
101.5°F (38.6°C) oral |
| Thermometer |
Keep outside of sauna |
• Scientific references supporting these recommendations:
1. Gibson et al. found that rectal temperature ≥38.5°C correlates with greater heat shock protein (Hsp72) mRNA induction
2. A 30-minute sauna session at 80°C increases rectal temperature by approximately 0.9°C in adults (PubMed: 3218894)
3. Heat therapy research indicates core temperatures above 40°C (104°F) risk hyperthermia
4. Oral temperature typically reads 0.3°C to 0.5°C lower than rectal temperature (NCBI NBK562334)
5. Heat shock protein activation threshold documented at approximately 39°C/102.2°F core temperature
Other Methods to Improve HRV
Remember, low HRV isn’t a disease in itself but rather an indicator that your body’s resilience to stressors is down. Just as positive changes like controlled breathing, exercise and sauna usage can improve it, exposure to toxins and other stressors can worsen it.
For instance, exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic field has been found to affect HRV in animal studies.21 A sedentary lifestyle is also linked to worsened HRV, with Brazilian researchers revealing:22
“We concluded that sedentary lifestyle in women induces impairment in autonomic cardiac modulation at rest and in response to physiological stress, compromising the quality of life, even before altering any cardiovascular or metabolic clinical parameters, reinforcing the potential role of HRV as early marker of cardiovascular risk in this population.”
On the other hand, stress-reduction techniques are beneficial to HRV. Use of a Tibetan singing bowl, for instance, which is often used for meditation and deep relaxation, increased the relaxation response and HRV among people in a high state of anxiety.23
So, as you take steps to reduce stress, eat healthy and stay active, your HRV will likely improve along with the rest of your mental and physical health. As noted by Harvard Health Publishing:24
“People who have a high HRV may have greater cardiovascular fitness and may be more resilient to stress. HRV may also provide personal feedback about your lifestyle and help motivate those who are considering taking steps toward a healthier life.
You might see a connection to HRV changes as you incorporate more mindfulness, meditation, sleep, and especially physical activity into your life. For those who love data and numbers, this could be a way to track how your nervous system is reacting not only to the environment, but also to your emotions, thoughts, and feelings.”