4.8 Article

Nocturnal Rostral Fluid Shift A Unifying Concept for the Pathogenesis of Obstructive and Central Sleep Apnea in Men With Heart Failure

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 121, Issue 14, Pages 1598-1605

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.902452

Keywords

heart failure; sleep; apnea, sleep

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP-82731]
  2. Fuji-Respironics Inc
  3. Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
  4. University of Brescia, Italy
  5. Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand
  6. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
  7. Kaohsiung Medical Center
  8. Chang Gung University College of Medicine, Kaohsiung, Taiwan

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Background-Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and central sleep apnea are common in patients with heart failure. We hypothesized that in such patients, severity of OSA is related to overnight rostral leg fluid displacement and increase in neck circumference, severity of central sleep apnea is related to overnight rostral fluid displacement and to sleep PCO2, and continuous positive airway pressure alleviates OSA in association with prevention of fluid accumulation in the neck. Methods and Results-In 57 patients with heart failure (ejection fraction <= 45%), we measured change in leg fluid volume and neck circumference before and after polysomnography, and we measured transcutaneous PCO2 during polysomnography. Patients were divided into an obstructive-dominant group (>= 50% of apneas and hypopneas obstructive) and a central-dominant group (>50% of events central). Patients with OSA received continuous positive airway pressure. In obstructive-dominant patients, there were inverse relationships between overnight change in leg fluid volume and both the overnight change in neck circumference (r = -0.780, P<0.001) and the apnea-hypopnea index (r = -0.881, P<0.001) but not transcutaneous PCO2. In central-dominant patients, the overnight reduction in leg fluid volume correlated inversely with the apnea-hypopnea index (r = -0.919, P<0.001) and the overnight change in neck circumference (r = -0.568, P=0.013) and directly with transcutaneous PCO2 (r=0.569, P=0.009). Continuous positive airway pressure alleviated OSA in association with prevention of the overnight increase in neck circumference (P<0.001). Conclusions-Our findings suggest that nocturnal rostral fluid shift is a unifying concept contributing to the pathogenesis of both OSA and central sleep apnea in patients with heart failure. (Circulation. 2010; 121: 1598-1605.)

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