4.5 Article

Effect of Dietary Nitrate Supplementation on Sleep in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Patients

Journal

NATURE AND SCIENCE OF SLEEP
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages 435-446

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/NSS.S279395

Keywords

polysomnography; oxygen saturation; beetroot juice; hypoxia

Funding

  1. Strategic Program for International Research Cooperation (SPIRE) at the University of Bergen [710022]
  2. National Association for Heart and Lung Disease, Jessheim, Norway
  3. Norwegian Centre of Excellence in Home Mechanical Ventilation at Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway [4644398]
  4. National Competence Centre for Sleep Disorders at Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway

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The study found that nitrate supplementation with beetroot juice can improve sleep quality in COPD patients, reduce atypical transitions, and increase oxygen saturation levels.
Purpose: Poor sleep quality in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a result of oxygen desaturation secondary to compromised lung function. Nitrate supplementation with dietary beetroot juice is known to elevate plasma nitrate and to increase the efficiency of oxygen utilization in non-COPD individuals; whether it is of therapeutic benefit for sleep quality in COPD has not been reported. Patients and Methods: In a counterbalanced within-subjects design involving 15 COPD patients as subjects, the subjects consumed either beetroot juice containing nitrate (BJ; similar to 6.2 mmol NO3-) or placebo (NO3- -depleted juice) immediately before a night of polysomnographic monitoring. Nitrate was measured in plasma collected immediately after waking. Results: While BJ consumption had no effect on the amount of time spent in any sleep stages, wake-to-N2 transitions and direct wake-to-rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) transitions, hallmarks of disordered sleep, were less frequent on the BJ night than on the placebo night. In the last two hours of the BJ night, percent time in REMS increased and delta power during deep (N3) non-REMS decreased, relative to the placebo night. Collectively, the reduced frequency of atypical transitions and the normalization of non-REMS/REMS dynamics after BJ are indicative of an improvement of sleep quality. BJ also resulted in sustained elevation of peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO(2)), during episodes of wake after sleep onset. Plasma nitrate was elevated nearly tenfold on the morning after BJ relative to placebo. Conclusion: BJ has a normalizing effect on disordered sleep in COPD, which may be related to improved oxygen delivery.

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