Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is often associated with hypertension and other cardiovascular
diseases. Blood pressure (BP) variability is part of the assessment of cardiovascular risk.
In OSA, BP variability has been studied mainly as very short-term (beat-by-beat) and short-term
(24-hour BP profile) variability. BP measured on consecutive heartbeats has been demonstrated
to be highly variable, due to repeated peaks during sleep, so that an accurate assessment of
nocturnal BP levels in OSA may require peculiar methodologies. In 24-hour recordings, BP
frequently features a "nondipping" profile, ie, <10% fall from day to night, which may increase
cardiovascular risk and occurrence of major cardiovascular events in the nocturnal hours. Also,
BP tends to show a large "morning BP surge", a still controversial negative prognostic sign.
Increased very short-term BP variability, high morning BP, and nondipping BP profile appear
related to the severity of OSA. Treatment of OSA slightly reduces mean 24-hour BP levels and
nocturnal beat-by-beat BP variability by abolishing nocturnal BP peaks. In some patients OSA
treatment turns a nondipping into a dipping BP profile. Treatment of arterial hypertension in
OSA usually requires both antihypertensive pharmacological therapy and treatment of apnea.
Addressing BP variability could help improve the management of OSA and reduce cardiovascular
risk. Possibly, drug administration at an appropriate time would ensure a dipping-BP profile.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
sleep apnea; ambulatory blood-pressure monitoring; beat-by-beat measurements; blood-pressure dipping; morning blood-pressure surge
Elenco autori:
Marrone, Oreste
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