Abstract

BackgroundObstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) results in sympathetic overdrive. Increased nocturnal heart rate variability (HRV) is a surrogate marker of autonomic disturbance. The aim was to study the association of the apnoea-hypopnea index (AHI), nocturnal hypoxaemia, and sleep fragmentation with nocturnal HRV to address the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying autonomic disturbance in OSA.MethodsParticipants of the Sleep Hearth Health Study with available data on nocturnal HRV and an AHI ≥10/h have been included in this cross-sectional analysis. The main outcome of interest was the association of sleep fragmentation, nocturnal hypoxaemia, and the AHI with nocturnal HRV. Multivariate regression modelling with the mean of the standard deviations of normal-sinus-to-normal-sinus-interbeat intervals in all 5-minute segments (SDNNIDX) and with low to high frequency power-ratio (LF/HF) as dependent variables controlling for prespecified confounders (age, sex, cups of coffee, beta blocker, nocturnal heart rate) was used to assess the contribution of the arousal index, total sleep time with an oxygen saturation <90% (TST90) and the AHI not due to arousals to HRV. The significance level was set at P<0.01.ResultsIn 258 patients with OSA (mean ± SD age 62±10 years, BMI 29±4 kg/m2, median (IQR) AHI 18.6/h (14.0–25.6), the arousal index (coef =0.42, P=0.002) was independently positively associated with SDNNIDX also after having controlled for potential confounders, whereas the AHI (coef =0.22, P=0.030) and TST90 (coef =0.36, P=0.054) were not. The arousal index—but not TST and AHI—was also independently associated with LF/HF.ConclusionsIn OSA, pronounced sleep fragmentation is associated with higher nocturnal HRV and a sympatho-vagal imbalance with sympathetic dominance. OSA severity and nocturnal hypoxaemia did not independently predict nocturnal HRV.

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