Abstract

Apnea and other breathing-related disorders have been linked to the development of hypertension or impairments of the cardiovascular, cognitive or metabolic systems. The combined assessment of multiple physiological signals acquired during sleep is of fundamental importance for providing additional insights about breathing disorder events and the associated impairments. In this work, we apply information-theoretic measures to describe the joint dynamics of cardiorespiratory physiological processes in a large group of patients reporting repeated episodes of hypopneas, apneas (central, obstructive, mixed) and respiratory effort related arousals (RERAs). We analyze the heart period as the target process and the airflow amplitude as the driver, computing the predictive information, the information storage, the information transfer, the internal information and the cross information, using a fuzzy kernel entropy estimator. The analyses were performed comparing the information measures among segments during, immediately before and after the respiratory event and with control segments. Results highlight a general tendency to decrease of predictive information and information storage of heart period, as well as of cross information and information transfer from respiration to heart period, during the breathing disordered events. The information-theoretic measures also vary according to the breathing disorder, and significant changes of information transfer can be detected during RERAs, suggesting that the latter could represent a risk factor for developing cardiovascular diseases. These findings reflect the impact of different sleep breathing disorders on respiratory sinus arrhythmia, suggesting overall higher complexity of the cardiac dynamics and weaker cardiorespiratory interactions which may have physiological and clinical relevance.

Highlights

  • Sleep is a physiological state characterized by noteworthy physiological changes in respiratory and cardiovascular activities, in almost all the stages

  • Among the abundance of respiratory events contained in the database, we have focused on respiratory effort-related arousals (RERAs), hypopneas (HAs), obstructive sleep apneas (OAs) and central apneas (CAs)

  • The information storage (Figure 5b) displays similar trends to those observed for the predictive information, with values increasing in the PRE and POST segments, and decreasing during the respiratory events, compared to the CONTROL condition

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Summary

Introduction

Sleep is a physiological state characterized by noteworthy physiological changes in respiratory and cardiovascular activities, in almost all the stages. OSA has nowadays an increased incidence within the general population, affecting about 10% to 20% of middle to older aged adults [4,10], and it has been associated to sleepiness which in turn causes tiredness all-over the day with increased risk of road traffic accidents [6,11]. Another subtle sleep breathing disorder is the respiratory effort–related arousal (RERA), which is characterized by obstructive upper airway airflow reduction not meeting the criteria of apnea or hypopnea, associated with increased respiratory effort that resolves with the appearance of arousals [12]

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