Literature DB >> 22277661

Vanished gender differences of cardiometabolic risk factors after matching the apnea hypopnea index at postmenopausal age.

Hua Ting1, Ren-Jing Huang, Hsiao-Sui Lo, Ai-Hui Chung, Shu-Yun Chang, Lee Wang, Shu-Ping Lee, Shin-Da Lee.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) and cardiometabolic risk factors are male prevalent.
OBJECTIVE: This study investigated whether gender differences remained prominent after matching for the apnea hypopnea index (AHI) and postmenopause.
METHODS: In a retrospective analysis of 350 eligible SDB patients, female patients were matched with male patients of the same age and body mass index (BMI) (age-BMI-matched [nAHImt]; n = 102 pairs) or were matched with male patients of the same age, BMI, and AHI (age-BMI-AHI-matched [AHImt]; n = 66 pairs). The nAHImt or AHImt patients were further separated into junior and senior subgroups.
RESULTS: In the nAHImt/junior group, women had shorter neck circumferences, better sleep architecture, and lower AHI, Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) score, blood pressure (BP), total cholesterol (TC), triglyceride (TG), and uric acid (UA) than nAHImt/junior men. In the AHImt/junior group, women had shorter neck circumferences, lower waist/hip ratios, ESS, BP, TG, and UA than AHImt junior men. In the nAHImt/senior group, women had lower AHI, neck circumferences, waist/hip ratios, diastolic BP, and UA than men. In contrast, in the AHImt/senior group, most cardiometabolic parameters were similar between women and men. After further matching for the AHI, many elements of gender differences disappeared.
CONCLUSIONS: Compared with AHImt men, women had lower UA, TG, BP, and daytime sleepiness before menopause, but gender differences became indistinguishable postmenopause. We suggested that matching sleep quality or adjusting AHI would be noteworthy and required for studying gender differences.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier HS Journals, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22277661     DOI: 10.1016/j.genm.2011.12.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gend Med        ISSN: 1550-8579


  1 in total

1.  Obstructive sleep apnea rather than diabetes or obesity associated with proteinuria in late mid-aged male workers: a decision tree analysis.

Authors:  Hua Ting; Cher-Ming Liou; Tung-Sheng Shih; Chih-Huan Wang; Shu-Yun Chang; Ai-Hui Chung; Jia-Fei Lee; Lee Wang; Ren-Jing Huang; Shin-Da Lee
Journal:  Sleep Breath       Date:  2015-02-10       Impact factor: 2.816

  1 in total

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