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Erschienen in: Sleep and Breathing 1/2018

07.08.2017 | Sleep Breathing Physiology and Disorders • Original Article

The effects of arousal accompanying an apneic event on blood pressure and sympathetic nerve activity in severe obstructive sleep apnea

verfasst von: Hiroki Uyama, Motoo Yamauchi, Yukio Fujita, Masanori Yoshikawa, Yoshinobu Ohnishi, Hiroshi Kimura

Erschienen in: Sleep and Breathing | Ausgabe 1/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

Arousal plays an important protective role against life-threatening events by terminating the apneic events. However, arousal might also be considered as a contributor to obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) pathogenesis since ventilatory overshoot due to arousal leads to irregular breathing. Patients with OSA who have greater upper airway compensation, expressed by relatively high proportion of apneic events without arousal, could have less adverse events or consequences. Thus, our hypothesis was that the proportion of apneic events with or without arousal affects daytime systemic blood pressure and nocturnal sympathetic activity.

Methods

Subjects were consecutive 97 patients who had diagnostic polysomnography (PSG) and showed severe OSA (apnea-hypopnea index ≥ 30). The proportion of apnea-hypopneas with arousal among all apnea-hypopneas was calculated in each patient. Then, the association among the proportion of arousal accompanying apnea-hypopneas and a diagnosis of hypertension or heart rate variability during the PSG were investigated.

Results

The proportion of apnea-hypopneas with arousal among all apnea-hypopneas was higher in hypertensive patients (n = 47) than that in normotensive patients (n = 50) (mean ± standard deviation; 80.0 ± 12.8% vs. 73.7 ± 13.0%, p < 0.01). However, heart rate variability was not associated with the proportion of apnea-hypopneas with arousal.

Conclusions

Apnea-hypopneas terminated by arousal are more often present in those with current systemic hypertension but independent of sympathetic nerve activity, compared with those whose apnea-hypopnea events do not have as many arousals. One could target an elevation in arousal threshold as a pathway for reducing daytime blood pressure.
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Metadaten
Titel
The effects of arousal accompanying an apneic event on blood pressure and sympathetic nerve activity in severe obstructive sleep apnea
verfasst von
Hiroki Uyama
Motoo Yamauchi
Yukio Fujita
Masanori Yoshikawa
Yoshinobu Ohnishi
Hiroshi Kimura
Publikationsdatum
07.08.2017
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Sleep and Breathing / Ausgabe 1/2018
Print ISSN: 1520-9512
Elektronische ISSN: 1522-1709
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11325-017-1548-8

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