Imagine if lowering your blood pressure was as simple as a gentle zap to your ear. That's the idea behind a new pilot study that tested a non-invasive technique called transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS). Researchers wanted to see if stimulating different parts of the outer ear could have an immediate effect on blood pressure and heart rate patterns in 14 people with high blood pressure and 14 healthy people.
The study found that the body's response depends on both where you stimulate and who you are. When healthy people received stimulation on a specific part of the ear called the cymba conchae, their blood pressure went down a bit. But for people with high blood pressure, that same spot didn't do much. Instead, they saw a small drop in one part of their blood pressure when a different spot, the tragus, was stimulated. The researchers also noted changes in heart rate variability, a measure of the nervous system's influence on the heart, but these signals were modest and not clearly tied to relaxation.
It's important to remember this was a very small, early-stage pilot study. The effects were measured during and right after a single session, so we don't know if they last or what happens with repeated use. The authors themselves note that a short session might not be enough to overcome the body's impaired regulation in chronic high blood pressure. This research is a first step, highlighting that future studies need to test longer or repeated stimulation to see if it could ever have a real clinical impact.