Ventilatory control in patients with sleep apnoea and left ventricular dysfunction: comparison of obstructive and central sleep apnoea
- PMID: 9543263
- DOI: 10.1183/09031936.98.11010007
Ventilatory control in patients with sleep apnoea and left ventricular dysfunction: comparison of obstructive and central sleep apnoea
Abstract
Sleep apnoea is common in patients with heart failure. While most patients have central sleep apnoea (CSA), a minority have obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). The pathophysiology of CSA is not well understood. We hypothesized that central chemosensitivity would be an important pathophysiological factor in patients with CSA, and not in OSA. The aim of this study was to compare ventilatory responses between patients with CSA and those with OSA. Acute ventilatory responses to eucapnic hypoxia and hyperoxic hypercapnia were measured during wakefulness in 34 patients (33 males and one female, aged 59+/-8 yrs (mean+/-SD)), with stable medically-treated left ventricular dysfunction (LVD) and sleep apnoea (18 OSA and 16 CSA). Patients with CSA had a decreased awake end-tidal carbon dioxide tension (4.1+/-0.5 kPa), increased ventilatory response to carbon dioxide (0.65+/-0.43 L.min.(-1).kPa PCO2(-1)), and eucapnic hypoxic responses in the normal range (0.6+/-0.4 L.min(-1)/% fall in arterial oxygen saturation (Sa,O2)). In contrast, patients with OSA had normal end-tidal carbon dioxide tension (4.9+/-0.5 kPa), and normal ventilatory responses to hypercapnia (0.29+/-0.16 L.min(-1).kPa PCO2(-1)) and hypoxia (0.5+/-0.5 L-min(-1)/% fall in Sa,O2). These findings suggest that augmented chemosensitivity to hypercapnia may be an important factor in the pathophysiology of central sleep apnoea in patients with heart failure.
Comment in
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Augmented chemosensitivity to hypercapnia: another link in our understanding of the pathogenesis of Cheyne-Stokes respiration.Eur Respir J. 1998 Jan;11(1):3-4. doi: 10.1183/09031936.98.11010003. Eur Respir J. 1998. PMID: 9543261 No abstract available.
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