Impact of obstructive sleep apnea on blood pressure in patients with hypertension

Barry G. Fields, I. Gurubhagavatula
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Abstract

Correspondence: Barry Fields Division of Sleep Medicine, 3624 Market Street, Suite 205, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA Tel +1 215-615-4875 Fax +1 215-615-4874 email barry.fields@uphs.upenn.edu Abstract: Hypertension is the most significant risk factor for death worldwide. Approximately 30%–40% of affected individuals have coexisting obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a disorder resulting from the upper airway’s inability to remain patent during sleep. A causal relationship between OSA and hypertension has been demonstrated. Blunting or elimination of normal blood pressure (BP) dipping during sleep is commonly seen in OSA patients, with corresponding increases in daytime BP. This dipping is clinically salient, because it is associated with the endorgan damage seen with chronic hypertension, such as cardiovascular, renal, and cerebrovascular disease. African-Americans are at greatest risk for non-dipping and end-organ damage. Rapidly fluctuating changes in sympathetic tone, intrathoracic pressure, oxyhemoglobin saturation, and carbon dioxide levels are all thought to play a role in acute and chronic BP elevation. Individuals with preexisting hypertension are most susceptible to OSA’s BP-raising effects. First-line therapy for OSA includes continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) delivered via a mask interface. Patients who show the greatest BP declines while using CPAP are more likely to be those who have at least moderate OSA, adhere to therapy, have preexisting hypertension, and whose blood vessels retain reversibility in disease-related remodeling. Given the heavy burden OSA-related hypertension places on the healthcare system, prevention, early detection, and prompt intervention should be the goals for all affected individuals.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停对高血压患者血压的影响
通讯:Barry Fields睡眠医学分部,3624 Market Street, Suite 205, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA Tel +1 215-615-4875 Fax +1 215-615-4874 email barry.fields@uphs.upenn.edu摘要:高血压是全球最重要的死亡危险因素。大约30%-40%的患者同时患有阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA),这是一种由于上呼吸道在睡眠期间无法保持通畅而导致的疾病。阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停与高血压之间的因果关系已得到证实。睡眠期间正常血压(BP)下降变钝或消除在OSA患者中很常见,并伴有相应的白天血压升高。这种下降在临床上是显著的,因为它与慢性高血压(如心血管、肾脏和脑血管疾病)的内器官损害有关。非裔美国人患非浸入性和末端器官损伤的风险最大。交感神经张力、胸内压、血氧饱和度和二氧化碳水平的快速波动变化都被认为在急性和慢性血压升高中起作用。既往存在高血压的个体最容易受到OSA血压升高的影响。OSA的一线治疗包括通过面罩接口持续气道正压通气(CPAP)。使用CPAP时血压下降幅度最大的患者更可能是那些至少患有中度OSA、坚持治疗、既往存在高血压以及血管在疾病相关重构中保持可逆性的患者。鉴于asa相关性高血压给医疗保健系统带来的沉重负担,预防、早期发现和及时干预应成为所有受影响个体的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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