People
who have obstructive sleep apnea -- when a person stops breathing for periods
during sleep -- have a greater risk of sudden cardiac death, according to a
study published online today in the Journal of the American College of
Cardiology. An estimated 12 million American adults have obstructive sleep
apnea, and many of them are undiagnosed, according to the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
In the study, funded by the NHLBI,
10,701 people who participated in sleep studies were followed for an average of
5.3 years for incidence of sudden cardiac death. In that time, 142 patients
died of sudden cardiac death. The most common predictors were an age of 60 or
older, 20 or more apnea episodes per hour of sleep, and oxygen saturation below
78 percent during sleep.
"What we found that is new with
this study is that if you have sleep apnea, your risk of sudden death increases
almost twofold, particularly if you stopped breathing more than 20 times per
hour of sleep and if you had severe falls in oxygen saturation during
sleep," says senior author Virend Somers, M.D., Ph.D., a Mayo Clinic
cardiologist.
When a person is breathing properly,
the oxygen saturation level -- when air flows through the lungs -- during sleep
is 100 percent, Dr. Somers says. This study showed that if a person is not
breathing properly and the oxygen saturation level falls to as low as 78
percent, the risk of sudden cardiac death significantly increases, he says.
Lead author Apoor Gami, M.D., says
Mayo Clinic's previous research showed that people with sleep apnea have a much
higher risk of sudden cardiac death between midnight and 6 a.m., when people
are typically asleep, while people without sleep apnea die more often from
sudden cardiac death between 6 a.m. and noon.
"So we knew that sleep apnea
changed the time of sudden cardiac death, but we didn't know if it changed the
overall risk," Dr. Gami says. "This new study shows that sleep apnea
does indeed increase the overall risk of sudden cardiac death independently of
other important risk factors.
"The prevalence of obstructive
sleep apnea in Western populations is high, and because of the relationship
between weight and sleep apnea, the current obesity epidemic is going to
further increase the scope of this problem," noted Dr. Gami, formerly at
Mayo Clinic and now a cardiologist at Midwest Heart Specialists-Advocate
Medical Group in Elmhurst, Ill.
Research has shown that sleep apnea
is potentially an important cause of cardiovascular conditions, such as high
blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, heart attacks and strokes, Dr. Somers
says. Sleep apnea is treatable. In addition to weight loss, physicians also can
recommend sleep posture changes and devices, such as a machine that delivers
air pressure through a mask placed over the nose while a person sleeps, he
says.
The study
was supported by grants HL65176 and NIH 1 UL1 RR024150 from the National
Institutes of Health (NIH).
By : science daily
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