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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 2019
Apnea-Hypopnea Event Duration Predicts Mortality in Men and Women in the Sleep Heart Health Study.
- Matthew P Butler, Jeffery T Emch, Michael Rueschman, Scott A Sands, Steven A Shea, Andrew Wellman, and Susan Redline.
- 1 Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences.
- Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2019 Apr 1; 199 (7): 903-912.
RationaleObstructive sleep apnea is a risk factor for mortality, but its diagnostic metric-the apnea-hypopnea index-is a poor risk predictor. The apnea-hypopnea index does not capture the range of physiological variability within and between patients, such as degree of hypoxemia and sleep fragmentation, that reflect differences in pathophysiological contributions of airway collapsibility, chemoreceptive negative feedback loop gain, and arousal threshold.ObjectivesTo test whether respiratory event duration, a heritable sleep apnea trait reflective of arousal threshold, predicts all-cause mortality.MethodsMortality risk as a function of event duration was estimated by Cox proportional hazards in the Sleep Heart Health Study, a prospective community-based cohort. Gender-specific hazard ratios were also calculated.Measurements And Main ResultsAmong 5,712 participants, 1,290 deaths occurred over 11 years of follow-up. After adjusting for demographic factors (mean age, 63 yr; 52% female), apnea-hypopnea index (mean, 13.8; SD, 15.0), smoking, and prevalent cardiometabolic disease, individuals with the shortest-duration events had a significant hazard ratio for all-cause mortality of 1.31 (95% confidence interval, 1.11-1.54). This relationship was observed in both men and women and was strongest in those with moderate sleep apnea (hazard ratio, 1.59; 95% confidence interval, 1.11-2.28).ConclusionsShort respiratory event duration, a marker for low arousal threshold, predicts mortality in men and women. Individuals with shorter respiratory events may be predisposed to increased ventilatory instability and/or have augmented autonomic nervous system responses that increase the likelihood of adverse health outcomes, underscoring the importance of assessing physiological variation in obstructive sleep apnea.
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