| Literature DB >> 23628083 |
Fabrice Jurysta1, Chantal Kempenaers, Jean-Pol Lanquart, André Noseda, Philippe van de Borne, Paul Linkowski.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment improves the risk of cardiovascular events in patients suffering from severe sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) but its effect on the link between delta power band that is related to deep sleep and the relative cardiac vagal component of heart rate variability, HF(nu) of HRV, is unknown. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that CPAP restores the link between cardiac autonomic activity and delta sleep across the night.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23628083 PMCID: PMC3685543 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2466-13-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Demographic parameters
| | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | 8 | 14 | |
| Age (years) | 45,6 ± 6,7 | 49,9 ± 7 | 44,0 ± 6,2 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 30,45 ± 5,75* | 31,87 ± 4,5* | 24,13 ± 2,34 |
| SBP (mmHg) | 110,0 ± 22,7 | 120 ± 30,7 | 118,2 ± 11,7 |
| DBP (mmHg) | 90,0 ± 31,6 | 99,3 ± 24,9* | 70,4 ± 8,9 |
| Nicotine (cig/day) | 8,13 ± 10,33 | 0,00 ± 0,00 | 2,64 ± 7,19 |
| Alcohol (U/day) | 0,75 ± 1,66 | 0,67 ± 1,16 | 0,36 ± 0,6 |
| Caffeine (100 mg/day) | 2,63 ± 2,05 | 3,00 ± 0,00 | 2,72 ± 2,05 |
| AHI (e | 63,50 ± 22,89*** | 5,50 ± 4,38 | 3,79 ± 3,17 |
| 16,90 ± 12,38*** | 1,37 ± 2,15 | 0,88 ± 1,10 | |
| 6,65 ± 5,71** | 0,60 ± 1,45 | 0,72 ± 1,24 | |
| 22,21 ± 21,43*** | 0,1 ± 0,28 | 0,02 ± 0,08 | |
| 17,51 ± 9,22*** | 3,48 ± 2,50 | 2,21 ± 1,63 | |
| Mean SaO2 (%) | 87,88 ± 5,36* | 92,50 ± 2,00 | 93,19 ± 1,47 |
| Bilateral PLMI (e | 11,83 ± 19,08 | 2,36 ± 2,38 | 0,59 ± 0,91 |
SAHS, Sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome; CPAP, Continuous positive airway pressure; BMI, Body mass index; SBP, Systolic blood pressure; DBP, Diastolic blood pressure; cig, Cigarettes; U, Units; AHI, Apnea-hypopnea index; OAI, Obstructive apnea index; CAI, Central apnea index; MAI, Mixed apnea index; HypoI, Hypopnea index; e/h, Events per hour; SaO, Mean arterial blood oxygen saturation; PLMI, Periodic leg movement index. Results expressed as mean ± standard deviation. * P < 0,05, ** P < 0,01, *** P < 0,001 vs. healthy controls.
Patients suffering from severe SAHS showed large values for all sleep breathing events and increased BMI in comparison to healthy men (controls). Patients treated by CPAP had larger BMI and DBP than controls.
Sleep parameters for the entire night and the first three sleep cycles
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|---|---|---|---|
| | |||
| TIB (min) | 470 ± 36 | 471 ± 44 | 466 ± 56 |
| SPT (min) | 444 ± 56 | 446 ± 58 | 444 ± 64 |
| TST (min) | 397 ± 48 | 401 ± 55 | 414 ± 61 |
| Sleep efficiency (%) | 84 ± 8 | 85 ± 8 | 87 ± 5 |
| Sleep latency (min) | 19 ± 9 | 23 ± 9 | 16 ± 10 |
| Amount of nocturnal awakenings | 74 ± 56 | 38 ± 14 | 38 ± 16 |
| Amount of sleep changes | 231 ± 99 | 167 ± 57 | 218 ± 81 |
| NREM duration (min) | 337 ± 35 | 309 ± 58 | 322 ± 47 |
| REM duration (min) | 63 ± 28* | 89 ± 11 | 91 ± 24 |
| WASO duration (min) | 44 ± 30 | 48 ± 33 | 30 ± 18 |
| NREM duration (% SPT) | 76 ± 8 | 69 ± 8 | 73 ± 3 |
| 3 ± 4 | 4 ± 7 | 7 ± 6 | |
| REM duration (% SPT) | 14 ± 6** | 20 ± 5 | 21 ± 4 |
| WASO duration (% SPT) | 10 ± 7 | 10 ± 6 | 7 ± 4 |
| | |||
| Sleep cycles duration (min) | 331 ± 55 | 316 ± 60 | 296 ± 35 |
| NREM duration (min) | 253 ± 43 | 229 ± 55 | 221 ± 24 |
| 237 ± 65* | 216 ± 58 | 190 ± 30 | |
| 16 ± 25 | 13 ± 20 | 31 ± 24 | |
| REM duration (min) | 47 ± 25 | 63 ± 21 | 63 ± 19 |
| WASO duration (min) | 31 ± 24 | 25 ± 17 | 12 ± 6 |
SAHS, Sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome; CPAP, Continuous positive airway pressure; TIB, Time in bed; SPT, Sleep period time; TST, Total sleep time; NREM, Non rapid eye movement sleep; REM, Rapid eye movement sleep; WASO, Wake after sleep onset; light sleep: sleep stages 1 + 2; deep sleep: sleep stages 3 + 4; min: minutes. Results were expressed as mean ± standard deviation. * P < 0,05, ** P < 0,01 vs. healthy controls.
Patients suffering from severe SAHS showed decreased overnight REM duration, expressed in minutes (min) or in percentage of the SPT (% SPT), and increased light sleep duration over the first three NREM-REM cycles, in comparison to healthy controls. All other sleep variables were similar between untreated apneic patients and controls as well as between CPAP treated apneic patients and controls.
Heart rate variability parameters
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|---|---|---|---|
| TF (ms2) | 3806,73 ± 1965,05 | 1516,12 ± 1126,28 | 2740,10 ± 2006,97 |
| VLF (ms2) | 1991,91 ± 1128,84 | 722,10 ± 447,80 | 1264,10 ± 1154,44 |
| LF (ms2) | 1120,43 ± 499,85 | 522,31 ± 497,23 | 995,51 ± 629,67 |
| HF (ms2) | 589,40 ± 711,42 | 255,41 ± 326,06 | 407,04 ± 359,76 |
| HFnu | 29,63 ± 16,90 | 32,19 ± 16,57 | 26,96 ± 11,95 |
| LF/HF | 3,52 ± 2,62 | 3,14 ± 2,79 | 3,60 ± 2,30 |
| RRI (sec) | 0,95 ± 0,06 | 0,95 ± 0,07 | 1,00 ± 0,15 |
| NREM RRI (sec) | 0,95 ± 0,06 | 1,01 ± 0,07 | 1,01 ± 0,16 |
| REM RRI (sec) | 0,96 ± 0,11 | 1,02 ± 0,06 | 0,98 ± 0,13 |
| WASO RRI (sec) | 0,92 ± 0,06 | 0,97 ± 0,06 | 0,97 ± 0,15 |
| NREM HFnu | 29,71 ± 17,52 | 32,81 ± 17,63 | 27,23 ± 12,23 |
| REM HFnu | 29,86 ± 15,86 | 30,93 ± 13,87 | 25,84 ± 13,97 |
| WASO HFnu | 30,25 ± 15,50 | 28,22 ± 12,28 | 24,86 ± 8,93 |
| NREM LF/HF | 3,84 ± 3,06 | 3,13 ± 2,66 | 3,52 ± 2,36 |
| REM LF/HF | 2,18 ± 2,38 | 3,09 ± 3,09 | 4,13 ± 3,15 |
| WASO LF/HF | 1,88 ± 1,35 | 3,70 ± 3,92 | 3,93 ± 3,18 |
SAHS, Sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome; CPAP, Continuous positive airway pressure; TF, Total power of heart rate variability (HRV); VLF, Very low frequency power of HRV; LF, Low frequency power of HRV; HF, High frequency power of HRV; RRI, RR-interval duration; NREM, Non rapid eye movement sleep; REM, Rapid eye movement sleep; WASO, Wake after sleep onset; ms, Milliseconds; nu, Normalized units. Results were expressed as mean ± standard deviation. Comparisons were performed with healthy men (controls).
Mean RR-interval durations, spectral components of RRI (expressed in absolute units, ms2, or normalized units) and the LF/HF ratio were similar between untreated patients and controls as well as between CPAP treated patients and controls throughout the night and sleep stages.
Figure 1Mean duration of RR intervals (RRI), expressed in seconds (sec), across sleep stages in SAHS patients before CPAP, with CPAP and healthy men (controls). SAHS: sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome; CPAP: Continuous positive airway pressure; NREM: non rapid eye movement sleep; REM: rapid eye movement sleep; WASO: wake after sleep onset. Mean values of the RR-interval durations were represented by boxes while standard errors were represented by bars in regard of three sleep stages. Each box colour was specific for each group of subjects. In each group, sleep stages (REM or WASO) were compared to NREM sleep. The symbol “$” correspond to a comparison between a specific sleep stage (REM or WASO) with NREM in a specific group of subjects with a P value < 0,001. RRI decreased from NREM sleep to wakefulness in each group of subjects.
Figure 2Coherence analysis parameters between HFand delta power band signals.Panel . Mean coherence value in SAHS patients before CPAP, with CPAP and healthy men (controls). Panel . Mean gain value, expressed as the amplitudes’ ratio between delta power band and HFnu (Adelta/AHFnu), in SAHS patients before CPAP, with CPAP and healthy men (controls). Panel. Mean delay, expressed in minutes (min), between the occurrence of modifications in HFnu and those in delta power band in SAHS patients before CPAP, with CPAP and healthy men (controls). SAHS: sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome; CPAP: Continuous positive airway pressure. For each panel, comparisons were performed with controls. Values were expressed as mean ± standard errors. * P < 0,05. Coherence values of the link between the relative cardiac vagal predominance and delta power band were decreased in untreated and long-term nasal CPAP treated apneic patients compared to controls. Gain values between these both signals decreased in untreated apneic patients in comparison to controls while during long-term nasal CPAP treatment, gain values were similar to controls. Delay between occurrence of modifications in HFnu and those in the delta power band did not differ between untreated apneic patients and controls or between CPAP treated patients and controls.