Sleep medicine
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Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is common in patients with atrial fibrillation (Afib). Although a high proportion of respiratory events are hypopneas, previous studies have only used apneas to differentiate obstructive (OSA) from central (CSA) sleep apnea. This study investigated the impact of using apneas and hypopneas versus apneas only to define the predominant type of SDB in Afib patients with preserved ejection fraction. ⋯ In hospitalized patients with Afib and SDB, use of apneas and hypopneas versus apneas alone had an important influence on the proportion of patients classified as having predominant OSA or CSA.
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Patients with cardiac pacemakers present a high prevalence of undiagnosed sleep apnea syndrome (SAS). New-generation pacemakers have algorithms that identify sleep respiratory events. Our aim was to evaluate their accuracy in the diagnosis of SAS. ⋯ SAS prevalence in patients with pacemakers is high (74%). Most are asymptomatic, which could delay the diagnosis. Patients with clinical indication for a pacemaker may benefit from a device with sleep apnea monitoring.
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Age is a risk factor of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). It has been shown that OSA progresses over time, although conflicting results have been reported. However, the effect of age on the severity of OSA and individual obstruction events has not been investigated within different OSA severity categories by taking the most prominent confounding factors (i.e., body mass index, gender, smoking, daytime sleepiness, snoring, hypertension, heart failure, and proportion of supine sleep) into account. ⋯ As obstruction event severity was more strongly dependent on the age than it was dependent on AHI, considering the severity of obstruction events could be beneficial while estimating the long-term effects of the treatments and prognosticating the disease progression.