Abstract

We studied the acute effects of apneas and hypopneas on blood pressure in a nonclinic population of middle-aged adults. Arterial pressure was measured noninvasively (photoelectric plethysmography) during an overnight, in-laboratory polysomnographic study in 72 men and 23 women enrolled in the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, a population-based study of sleep-disordered breathing. Sleep-disordered breathing events (272 apneas and 1469 hypopneas) were observed in 92% of subjects. The across-subject mean decreases in arterial O2 saturation were 9+/-8% (SD) for apneas (17+/-8 seconds duration) and 4+/-3% for hypopneas (21+/-6 seconds duration; 41+/-17% of baseline ventilation). In both apneas and hypopneas, even those with only 1% to 3% O2 desaturations, blood pressure decreased during the event, followed by an abrupt increase in the postevent recovery period. Mean values for peak changes in blood pressure (difference between the maximum during the recovery period and the minimum during the event) were 23+/-10 mm Hg for systolic and 13+/-6 mm Hg for diastolic pressure. The strongest predictors of the pressor responses to apneas and hypopneas were (in order of importance): magnitude of the ventilatory overshoot, length of the event, magnitude of changes in heart rate and arterial O2 saturation, and presence or absence of electroencephalographic arousal. We speculate that these fluctuations may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension in individuals with subclinical sleep-disordered breathing.

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