Mayer Waves

TL;DR

Mayer waves are ~0.1 Hz blood pressure oscillations that arise from baroreflex-mediated feedback between heart rate and vascular tone. They are the primary physiological source of low-frequency (LF) HRV power — NOT a direct sympathetic tone marker, despite frequent mischaracterization in consumer HRV products.

What they are

Mayer waves are spontaneous, rhythmic oscillations in arterial blood pressure occurring at approximately 0.1 Hz (roughly 6 cycles per minute). The mechanism:

  1. A blood pressure rise triggers baroreceptors in the aortic arch and carotid sinus
  2. This inhibits sympathetic outflow and increases vagal tone, slowing heart rate and reducing vascular tone
  3. Blood pressure falls
  4. The baroreceptor inhibition lifts; sympathetic tone increases; heart rate rises and vascular tone increases
  5. Blood pressure rises again → cycle repeats

This creates a negative feedback loop generating a coherent oscillation at ~0.1 Hz. The oscillation in heart rate from this loop is reflected in the LF band of HRV power spectrum analysis.

Why they matter for Vitals

Critical concept: LF power does NOT equal sympathetic activity.

  • Mayer wave amplitude is influenced by sympathetic tone, but also by baroreflex sensitivity, vascular stiffness, blood volume, and respiratory mechanics
  • The “sympathetic label” on LF power is contested in autonomic neuroscience — Billman et al. 2013 explicitly refuted this interpretation
  • Using LF/HF as a “sympathetic vs parasympathetic balance” score is the most widespread and consequential error in consumer HRV products
  • Apple Watch does not expose LF/HF in consumer output — but the myth has already shaped user expectations

For HRV interpretation:

  • Elevated LF power may reflect baroreflex engagement, vascular dynamics, or sympathetic contribution — it is non-specific
  • Changes in LF power over time cannot be cleanly attributed to training adaptation, stress, or autonomic remodeling without controlling for vascular and baroreflex confounds
  • LF/HF ratio is not a valid measure of “autonomic balance” — do not use it in any coaching claim

Evidence

  • Billman GE. The LF/HF ratio does not accurately measure cardiac sympatho-vagal balance. Front Physiol. 2013;4:26. PMID: 23431279 / PMCID: PMC3576706
  • Berntson GG, Bigger JT Jr, Eckberg DL, et al. Heart rate variability: origins, methods, and interpretive caveats. Psychophysiology. 1997;34(6):623-648. PMID: 9401419