Cardiac
Deaths Peak During Sleep For OSA Patients
Article taken from www.HMEnews.com
March 28, 2005
BOSTON - The 20 million Americans who have obstructive sleep
apnea (OSA) are more likely to die suddenly of cardiac causes
between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. than during the other 16 hours of the
day combined, according to findings of a Mayo Clinic study published
this week in the New England Journal of Medicine.
This increased risk among patients with OSA is even more striking
because it comes when cardiac deaths in the general population
are at their low point. Among the general population, just after
waking, from 6 a.m. to noon, is the most common time for heart
attacks to occur.
The study examined the death certificates of 112 Minnesota residents
who had sleep studies at the Mayo Clinic Sleep Disorder Center
between 1987 and 2003 and who died suddenly of cardiac causes.
More than half of the 78 OSA patients died between 10 p.m. and
6 a.m., while only 24% of the 34 cardiac deaths among non-OSA
patients occurred during that period.
The reason for this difference, explained researchers, is that
when a person with OSA continually stops breathing during the
night, it elevates nighttime blood pressure and causes heart rhythm
disturbances.
Researchers cautioned that the study could not determine whether
OSA raises the overall risk of sudden cardiac death, or whether
it simply shifts the risk to the sleeping hours. The researchers
also could not tell whether CPAP devices reduced the nocturnal
death risk because records of whether they had been used in the
days before sudden death were unavailable. Previous studies have
proven CPAP effective in OSA symptom relief and in raising nighttime
oxygen levels in the blood, however.
“At the very least, the study may help us better understand
why people should die in their sleep at all. We now know that
persons with sleep apnea have a peak in sudden cardiac death risk
at a time when the general population is relatively protected,”
said one researcher. “Because so many [OSA cases] are undiagnosed,
we should increase our efforts to identify them and provide the
appropriate advice and treatment.”
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