Journal of sleep research
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Journal of sleep research · Sep 2006
Night-to-night alterations in sleep apnea type in patients with heart failure.
In patients with heart failure, apnea type can shift overnight from mainly obstructive to mainly central in association with reductions in PCO(2) and increases in periodic breathing cycle length, indicative of a fall in cardiac output. We hypothesized that the predominant apnea type could also vary from one night to another in association with alterations in PCO(2) and cycle length. ⋯ In contrast, in both the stable central (n = 8, duration between sleep studies 11.9 +/- 5.3 months) and the stable obstructive (n = 8, duration between studies 6.9 +/- 5.2 months) sleep apnea groups, neither PCO(2) nor cycle length changed significantly between the baseline and follow-up sleep studies. We conclude that in some patients with heart failure, OSA and CSA are part of a spectrum of periodic breathing that can shift over time in association with alterations in PCO(2), cycle length and probably cardiac function.
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Journal of sleep research · Sep 2006
Sleep bruxism is associated to micro-arousals and an increase in cardiac sympathetic activity.
Sleep bruxism (SB) subjects show a higher incidence of rhythmic masticatory muscle activity (RMMA) than control subjects. RMMA is associated with sleep micro-arousals. This study aims to: (i) assess RMMA/SB episodes in relation to sleep cycles; (ii) establish if RMMA/SB and micro-arousals occur in relation to the slow wave activity (SWA) dynamics; (iii) analyze the association between RMMA/SB and autonomic cardiac activity across sleep cycles. ⋯ The cross-correlation plot revealed that SWA decreases following SB onset (P