Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) causes blood pressure (BP) surges during sleep, which may lead to increased sleep-onset cardiovascular events. The authors recently developed a triggered nocturnal BP monitoring system that initiates BP measurements when oxygen desaturation falls below a variable threshold. The distribution and reproducibility of hypoxia-triggered nocturnal BP parameters compared with those of fixed-interval nocturnal BP parameters for two consecutive nights in 147 OSA patients (mean age 59.4 years, 86.4% men) were evaluated. The mean and distribution (standard deviation [SD]) of the hypoxia-peak systolic BP (SBP) were significantly greater than that of the mean nocturnal SBP (mean±SD: 148.8±20.5 vs 123.4±14.2 mm Hg, P<.001). The repeatability coefficient (expressed as %MV) of hypoxia-peak SBP between night 1 and night 2 was comparable to that of mean nocturnal SBP (43% vs 32%). In conclusion, hypoxia-peak nocturnal BP was much higher than mean nocturnal BP, and it was as reproducible as mean nocturnal BP.
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