• Sleep · Jun 2013

    Increased sympathetic and decreased parasympathetic cardiac tone in patients with sleep related alveolar hypoventilation.

    • Jose-Alberto Palma, Elena Urrestarazu, Jon Lopez-Azcarate, Manuel Alegre, Secundino Fernandez, Julio Artieda, and Jorge Iriarte.
    • Sleep Unit and Clinical Neurophysiology Section, University Clinic of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.
    • Sleep. 2013 Jun 1;36(6):933-40.

    ObjectiveTo assess autonomic function by heart rate variability (HRV) during sleep in patients with sleep related alveolar hypoventilation (SRAH) and to compare it with that of patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and control patients.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingSleep Unit, University Hospital of University of Navarra.PatientsFifteen idiopathic and obesity related-SRAH patients were studied. For each patient with SRAH, a patient with OSA, matched in age, sex, body mass index (BMI), minimal oxygen saturation (SatO2), and mean SatO2 was selected. Control patients were also matched in age, sex, and BMI with patients with OSA and those with SRAH, and in apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) with patients with SRAH.InterventionsN/A.Measurements And ResultsTime- and frequency-domain HRV measures (R-R, standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR interval [SDNN], very low frequency [VLF], low frequency [LF], high frequency [HF], LF/HF ratio) were calculated across all sleep stages as well as during wakefulness just before and after sleep during a 1-night polysomnography. In patients with SRAH and OSA, LF was increased during rapid eye movement (REM) when compared with control patients, whereas HF was decreased during REM and N1-N2 sleep stages. The LF/HF ratio was equally increased in patients with SRAH and OSA during REM and N1-N2. Correlation analysis showed that LF and HF values during REM sleep were correlated with minimal SatO2 and mean SatO2.ConclusionsPatients with SRAH exhibited an abnormal cardiac tone during sleep. This fact appears to be related to the severity of nocturnal oxygen desaturation. Moreover, there were no differences between OSA and SRAH, supporting the hypothesis that autonomic changes in OSA are primarily related to a reduced nocturnal oxygen saturation, rather than a consequence of other factors such as nocturnal respiratory events.

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