Sleep
apnea tied to heart risk even after arteries are cleared
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[June 16, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - For people who have had
a procedure to open blocked heart arteries, untreated sleep-breathing
problems like snoring or apnea may raise the risk of a future heart
attack or stroke, researchers say.
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Patients in Japan who had the artery-clearing procedure after
experiencing chest pain or a heart attack were more than twice as
likely to have heart failure, a heart attack or a stroke in the next
five years if they also had sleep-breathing problems.
Intermittent low-oxygen periods during sleep may increase stress or
activate inflammatory responses that damage the heart, said lead
author Dr. Toru Mazaki of the department of cardiology at Kobe
Central Hospital in Japan.
Obstructive sleep apnea, the most common form of sleep apnea, is a
condition where breathing stops for several seconds during sleep
because tissue in the throat collapses, blocking the airway. This
can happen dozens of times a night, interrupting sleep and leaving
the person feeling tired during the day.
Snoring, usually the result of only partial blockage in the sinuses
or other parts of the respiratory tract, also reduces the amount of
oxygen a sleeper gets.
So-called sleep-disordered breathing, especially apnea, has been
tied to increased risk of heart disease and stroke in past research.
To see if it affects risk for people who have already been treated
for blocked arteries, the researchers used heart and breathing
monitors on 241 patients to track breathing issues over one night of
sleep. All the participants had undergone angioplasty, the clearing
of a blocked heart artery, including placement of a tube called a
stent to keep the artery open.
The sleep measurements took place about one week after each person's
angioplasty.
Just over half of the patients were found to have sleep-disordered
breathing, meaning five or more disrupted breathing events per hour,
according to the report in the Journal of the American Heart
Association.
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The researchers then tracked participants for an average of five and
a half years. During that time, 10 people with sleep disordered
breathing and three without sleep breathing issues died. Major
adverse events like heart attack and stroke had occurred in more
than 20 percent of those with sleep breathing issues, compared to 8
percent of those without breathing problems.
“There is limited awareness of sleep-disordered breathing among
doctors who care for patients with heart attack,” Mazaki told
Reuters Health by email. “Doctors and patients should consider sleep
studies following heart attack and angioplasty to rule out
sleep-disordered breathing or take necessary precautions to restore
healthy breathing during sleep.”
Sleep-disordered breathing has been associated with cardiovascular
risks and symptoms like high blood pressure, elevated glucose and
abnormal heart rhythms, said Dr. Nieca Goldberg of NYU Langone
Medical Center in New York who is also a spokesperson for the
American Heart Association and was not part of the new study.
“Hopefully based on this study, doctors will pay more attention to
their patient’s symptoms of fatigue or awakening from sleep,”
Goldberg told Reuters Health by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1f4U4k9 Journal of the American Heart
Association, online June 15, 2016.
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