Sleep Apnea Mask

Sleep Apnea and Heart Disease

Sleep Apnea and Heart Disease
Dr. Virend K. Somers

What is the connection between sleep apnea and heart disease?

The connection between sleep apnea and heart disease is evolving very rapidly. People with cardiovascular problems such as high blood pressure, heart failure, and stroke have a high prevalence of sleep apnea. Whether sleep apnea actually causes heart disease is still unclear, but we do know that if you have sleep apnea today, the chance that you will develop hypertension in the future increases significantly.

One of the problems in defining the relationship between sleep apnea and heart disease is that people with sleep apnea often have other co-existing diseases as well.

If you treat people with high blood pressure and sleep apnea, or heart failure and sleep apnea, the measures of blood pressure or heart failure are significantly improved. There is good evidence to think there is a cause-and-effect relationship between hypertension and sleep apnea.

Why does your blood pressure go up when your sleep is disrupted by sleep apnea?

Your blood pressure will go up because when you're not breathing, the oxygen level in your body falls and excites receptors that alert the brain. In response, the brain sends signals through the nervous system and essentially tells the blood vessels to "tighten up" in order to increase the flow of oxygen to the heart and the brain, because they have priority.

The problem is that things that go on at night tend to carry over in the daytime, even when the sleep apnea patient is awake. The low oxygen levels at night seem to trigger multiple mechanisms that persist during the daytime, even when the patient is breathing normally.

How can CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) reduce the cardiovascular consequences of sleep apnea?

The available evidence tells us that when you treat people with sleep apnea using CPAP, their blood pressure is not only lower at night—it's also lower during the day. That's a very good thing. Moreover, people with atrial fibrillation (a common type of irregular heart beat) with sleep apnea that is appropriately treated have only a 40% chance of coming back for further treatment of their atrial fibrillation. If their sleep apnea is untreated, the chance of a recurrence of atrial fibrillation goes up to 80%. The message to heart patients with sleep apnea is: With treatment of your sleep apnea, your chances of improvement are considerably better.

 

--Dr. Virend K. Somers is Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN.

 

This article originally appeared in the Summer 2004 issue of sleepmatters.

Learn more about how these medical devices can make a big difference in nighttime comfort for people with breathing issues.Sleep Apnea is a sleep disorder in which breathing is briefly and repeatedly interrupted during sleep. Learn how to cope with this sleep-related breathing disorder.A frequent need to get up and go to the bathroom to urinate at night is called nocturia. It differs...Nearly one-quarter of all workers have shifts that are not during the daytime, and more than two-thirds of these workers...You don't have to struggle with sleepless nights. Help is available! There are treatment options for insomnia, ranging from behavioral...How you feel about the sleep you get every night is known as sleep satisfaction. Unlike sleep quantity (which objectively...For many parents, the word “tired” takes on new meaning during the first few weeks after bringing a baby home....Of the approximately 90 million American adults who occasionally experience snoring, many think of it as simply an annoyance, or...Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)—a disorder where blocked airways during sleep lead to disrupted breathing and excessive snoring —affects about 3...Sleep is restorative for the body and mind. But if you’re among the more than 18 million Americans who have...

Image
Sleep Apnea and Heart Disease

Source: Internet


Categories