Systolic blood pressure (SBP) variability is increased and R-R interval variability is reduced in the elderly. Little is known, however, about how SBP and R-R interval variabilities change in the very elderly. More important, however, it is not known which frequency components of SBP and R-R interval variability are affected significantly. We addressed this issue in subjects older than 70 years by broadband spectral analysis, which allows all variability components from the lowest to the highest frequency to be considered. In 20 very elderly normotensive subjects (mean +/- SD age, 78.1 +/- 6.8 years) and 28 normotensive adult subjects (36.1 +/- 7.1 years), noninvasive finger blood pressure and R-R intervals were recorded continuously for 30 minutes in the supine position and 15 minutes in the upright position. SBP and R-R interval power spectral densities were computed over the entire frequency region between 0.005 Hz (0.007 Hz in the upright position) and 0.5 Hz. Overall SBP variability (SD) was greater and overall R-R interval variability was less in very old subjects than in adult subjects. All spectral R-R interval powers were reduced significantly in very elderly individuals. The spectral SBP powers were greater in the very elderly group than in the adult group only in the very-low-frequency range (<0.04 Hz). This was true in the supine and the standing positions. With subjects in the standing position, the shape of the broadband spectra differed in the very old and adult subjects because in the former group the increase in SBP and R-R interval power around 0.1 Hz that was seen in the latter was blunted. Therefore, in very elderly subjects a reduction in overall R-R interval variability is accounted for by a reduction in all of its frequency components. The accompanying increase in overall BP variability, however, results from a nonhomogeneous behavior of its frequency components, which consists of an increase in the very low frequency and a concomitant reduction in the higher frequency powers. The mechanisms responsible for these changes may be complex, but at least they may in part reflect the baroreflex impairment and autonomic dysfunction that characterize aging.