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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Blood pressure responsiveness to obstructive events during sleep after chronic CPAP
Giuseppe InsalacoMaria R. BonsignoreAdriana SalvaggioOreste MarroneGiovanni Bonsignoresubject
Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineAdultMaleBlood pressure Continuous positive airway pressure Hypoxaemia Polysomnographymedicine.medical_treatmentPolysomnographyPositive pressureDiastoleBlood PressurePolysomnographyRisk AssessmentSensitivity and SpecificitySeverity of Illness IndexSampling StudiesPositive-Pressure RespirationmedicineHumansContinuous positive airway pressureProspective StudiesMonitoring PhysiologicProbabilitySleep disorderSleep Apnea Obstructivemedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryRespiratory diseaseApneaBlood Pressure DeterminationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePrognosisrespiratory tract diseasesBlood pressureTreatment OutcomeAnesthesiaLinear Modelsmedicine.symptombusinessdescription
The aim of this study was to investigate whether chronic continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) affects blood pressure (BP) responsiveness to obstructive events occurring on the first night of CPAP withdrawal in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) after chronic treatment. Thirteen male subjects with severe OSA underwent nocturnal polysomnography with beatbybeat BP monitoring before treatment and after 4.9±3.4 months of home CPAP (mean daily use 5.1±1.7 h). Variations in oxyhaemoglobin saturation (Δ S a,O2), systolic (Δ P s), and diastolic (Δ P d) BP within nonrapid eye movement apnoeas and hypopnoeas were measured on a sample of pre and posttreatment events. In addition, a pretreatment sample was selected for Δ S a,O2 to match posttreatment events. The higher the mean Δ S a,O2 was in the full pretreatment sample, the more Δ S a,O2, Δ P s and Δ P d were attenuated after treatment. Mean Δ P s decreased from 47.3±8.5 in the full pretreatment sample to 42.2±6.9 in the selected pretreatment sample, to 31.5±5.9 mmHg in the posttreatment sample. The posttreatment value differed significantly from both the pretreatment values. The corresponding values for mean Δ P d were 27.0±3.5, 24.0±3.1 and 19.6±3.7 mmHg, with all values differing significantly from each other. Chronic continuous positive airway pressure is followed by a decrease in apnoea/hypopnoearelated blood pressure swings, possibly secondary to both reduced severity of eventrelated hypoxaemia and decreased responsiveness to obstructive events secondary to chronic prevention of nocturnal intermittent hypoxaemia. This study was performed for the “Protocollo d'intesa della Ricerca Finalizzata 2000”, developed with Fondazione don Carlo Gnocchi Onlus, Convenzione ICS 030.7/RF 00.80.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-03-01 |