| Literature DB >> 27640202 |
Abstract
The majority of patients with heart failure have sleep-disordered breathing (SDB)-with central (rather than obstructive) sleep apnoea becoming the predominant form in those with more severe disease. Cyclical apnoeas and hypopnoeas are associated with sleep disturbance, hypoxaemia, haemodynamic changes, and sympathetic activation. Such patients have a worse prognosis than those without SDB. Mask-based therapies of positive airway pressure targeted at SDB can improve measures of sleep quality and partially normalise the sleep and respiratory physiology, but recent randomised trials of cardiovascular outcomes in central sleep apnoea have been neutral or suggested the possibility of harm, likely from increased sudden death. Further randomised outcome studies (with cardiovascular mortality and hospitalisation endpoints) are required to determine whether mask-based treatment for SDB is appropriate for patients with chronic systolic heart failure and obstructive sleep apnoea, for those with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, and for those with decompensated heart failure. New therapies for sleep apnoea-such as implantable phrenic nerve stimulators-also require robust assessment. No longer can the surrogate endpoints of improvement in respiratory and sleep metrics be taken as adequate therapeutic outcome measures in patients with heart failure and sleep apnoea.Entities:
Keywords: Heart failure; Sleep apnoea; Sleep-disordered breathing
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27640202 PMCID: PMC5069337 DOI: 10.1007/s11897-016-0304-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Heart Fail Rep ISSN: 1546-9530
Fig. 1Polygraph recordings from a patient with a OSA and b CSA. Note the continuation of respiratory movement during the period of apnoea in OSA, but the absence of respiratory effort during apnoea in CSA. First panel is noise related to snoring (seen in a not b), second is nasal air flow, third is thoracic and abdominal wall movement, fourth is arterial oxygen saturation, and fifth is pulse rate (modified from reference [15])
Disease mechanisms linking SDB with heart failure
| Sleep apnoea | Intermittent hypoxaemia |
| Intermittent hypercapnia | |
| Increased negative intrathoracic pressure swings | |
| Increased arousals from sleep | |
| Sleep deprivation | |
| Sleep fragmentation | |
| Disease mechanisms | Sympathetic nervous system activation |
| Metabolic dysregulation | |
| Endothelial dysfunction | |
| Systemic inflammation | |
| Hypercoagulability | |
| Impaired cardiac function | |
| Left atrial enlargement | |
| Myocardial ischaemia | |
| Myocardial fibrosis | |
| Arrhythmia |