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Elucidation of obstructive sleep apnoea related blood pressure surge using a novel continuous beat-to-beat blood pressure monitoring system

Authors
 Younghoon Kwon  ;  Martin Baruch  ;  Patrick L Stafford  ;  Heather Bonner  ;  Yeilim Cho  ;  Sula Mazimba  ;  Jeongok G Logan  ;  Daichi Shimbo  ;  Sung-Ha Park  ;  Gen-Min Lin  ;  Ali Azarbarzin  ;  David A Calhoun  ;  Richard Berry  ;  Robert M Carey 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, Vol.40(3) : 520-527, 2022-03 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
ISSN
 0263-6352 
Issue Date
2022-03
MeSH
Blood Pressure / physiology ; Blood Pressure Determination* ; Continuous Positive Airway Pressure ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Polysomnography ; Sleep Apnea, Obstructive*
Abstract
Background: Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) episode related blood pressure (BP) surge may mediate the association of OSA with cardiovascular disease. However, BP is not measured during a clinical sleep study.

Method: We tested the feasibility of incorporating the Caretaker physiological monitor, which utilizes a novel continuous beat-to-beat (b-b) BP monitoring technology, into polysomnography (PSG) and aimed to characterize BP surges related to obstructive respiratory events. B-b BP was concurrently collected and merged with PSG data on a posthoc basis. We compared BP surge between mean respiratory (apnoea, hypopnea and desaturation-alone events) and nonrespiratory events (spontaneous or leg movement-related arousals). We examined the association of the degree of oxygen desaturation with BP surge in a given respiratory event combining all events. A total of 17 consecutive patients (12 men, mean 52 years old, nine diagnostic and eight split-night PSGs) undergoing clinically indicated PSG were included after excluding one patient with poor signal quality due to excessive movement.

Results: Caretaker was well tolerated. Mean respiratory BP surge ranged from 5 to 19 mmHg [Median (IQR) = 13.9 (9.5--16.2)]. Mean BP surge between the respiratory and nonrespiratory events was similar [13.8 (4.5) vs. 14.9 (5.3) mmHg, P = 0.13]. Accounting for the count distribution of desaturation/BP surge data pair events, there was a linear correlation between the degree of oxygen desaturation and BP surge (R = 0.57, P < 0.001). In eight patients undergoing split-night sleep studies, the number of BP surge events (≥10 mmHg/h) decreased during continuous positive airway pressure in all but one patient.

Conclusion: We demonstrated highly variable OSA-related BP surge patterns using the Caretaker's b-b BP monitoring technology that has the potential to be integrated into sleep studies.
Full Text
https://journals.lww.com/jhypertension/Fulltext/2022/03000/Elucidation_of_obstructive_sleep_apnoea_related.13.aspx
DOI
10.1097/HJH.0000000000003041
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Park, Sung Ha(박성하) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5362-478X
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/191297
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