| Literature DB >> 29142787 |
Diana M Rosenthal1, Donaldson F Conserve2, Dodley Severe3, Michaele A Gedeon3, Ferdinand Zizi1, Georges Casimir4, Samy I McFarlane5, Girardin Jean-Louis1.
Abstract
Sleep apnea is a prevalent sleep disorder that disproportionately affects blacks and has been previously studied among Caribbean-born blacks in Brooklyn, New York, but there has been negligible research in the Caribbean, specifically Haiti, and developing countries on this pressing health issue. A total of 373 medical students (mean age=20.6 years ± 2.3 years) from a medical school in Haiti participated in this study. Participants were administered a questionnaire assessing their sleep health and cardiovascular outcomes. The rate of sleep apnea symptoms was: snoring (13.2%), excessive daytime sleepiness (73.7%), and difficulty maintaining sleep (25.3%). Many reported falling asleep while watching television (68.2%) or while driving (7.8%). Based on logistic regression analysis, reported nocturnal breathing pauses was the most important predictor of the likelihood of reporting a history of cardiac disease (14.96; 95% CI=1.27-76.07). Findings suggest that more aggressive effort should be made to increase screening of sleep apnea among Haitians, thereby increasing the likelihood for early detection and treatment to reduce sleep-related risk of cardiovascular disease.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Haiti; Medical students; Sleep apnea
Year: 2017 PMID: 29142787 PMCID: PMC5683726 DOI: 10.4172/2167-0277.1000264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sleep Disord Ther ISSN: 2167-0277
Sleep characteristics of participants reporting adverse cardiovascular outcomes.
| Variable | N | No (%) | Yes (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snoring | 365 | 317 (86.85) | 48 (13.15) |
| Witnessed Apneas | 366 | 272 (74.3) | 94 (25.7) |
| Excessive Daytime Sleepiness | 361 | 95 (26.3) | 266 (73.7) |
| Falling Asleep Watching TV | 368 | 117 (31.8) | 251 (68.2) |
| Falling Asleep Driving | 256 | 236 (92.2) | 20 (7.8) |
| Difficulty Initiating Sleep | 367 | 265 (72.2) | 102 (27.8) |
| Difficulty Maintaining Sleep | 363 | 271 (74.7) | 92 (25.3) |
| Early Morning Awakening | 357 | 155 (43.4) | 202 (56.6) |
| Excessive Tossing and Turning | 365 | 199 (54.5) | 166 (45.5) |
| Daytime Napping | 362 | 140 (38.7) | 222 (61.3) |
| Use of Sleep Medicine | 368 | 332 (90.2) | 36 (9.8) |
Adverse cardiovascular outcomes were reported as binary (yes/no) responses. The number and percentage of these self-reported outcomes in our sample of medical students are presented respectively in Table 1.