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Sleep apnea predict heart risks
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Sleep apnea predict heart risks
From HUFFPOST Healthy Living
What Is It About Sleep Apnea That Seems To Predict Heart Risks?

It's well-established that obstructive sleep apnea is linked with increased heart risks. But now, a new study teases apart what exactly it is about the sleep disorder, characterized by pauses in breathing during sleep leading to disrupted sleep, that seems to predict these cardiovascular events.

Obstructive sleep apnea is measured by the number of times a person stops breathing during sleep (the apnea-hypopnea index, or AHI). However, researchers found that there were a number of other elements of sleep apnea that seemed to be predictive of cardiovascular events. The biggest one: the amount of time spent sleeping when the oxygen saturation was below 90 percent.

Other elements associated with a cardiovascular event included heart rate, daytime sleepiness, number of awakenings during the night, sleep time and leg movements, the researchers found. While the apnea-hypopnea index was associated with cardiovascular events when it was looked at by itself, it was no longer considered a significant predictor once all the other elements were factored in.

The study, published in the journal PLOS Medicine, is based on 10,149 people with obstructive sleep apnea who underwent diagnostic polysomnography between 1994 and 2010; 1,172 of those people developed cardiovascular disease.

"We believe a revision of the operative definition of OSA [obstructive sleep apnea] may be necessary, to reflect not simply the frequency of apneas and hypopneas, but the actual physiologic consequences that result -- the severity of oxygen desaturation, sleep fragmentation, sleep deprivation and sympathetic activation," the University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital researchers said in the study. "It is these 'downstream' phenomena that we have found to be more predictive of CV [cardiovascular] risk."
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#2
RE: Sleep apnea predict heart risks
Interesting.

There is a lot of deaths resulting from heart attacks on one side of my family. As in people dying well before 60. My Grandpa that I look as well as am built exactly like died when he was 57. He had a lot of other ailments also. Liver problems and lung cancer. He never smoked or drank either. Just listening to relatives tell me about his sleep habits and such leads me to believe he had severe OSA. His brothers died at 43 and 46 of heart attacks. One of them was smoker though.

My other Grandpa could have had it as well. I remember as kids my sister and I watching him take naps during the day. He snored really bad and had those episodes where he would stop breathing (now that I know what they are). He was plagued with stomach issues, but lived to be in his early 80's. All of his siblings lived to their 80's and 90's as well.
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