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Usefulness of cardiac parasympathetic index in CPAP‐treated patients with obstructive sleep apnea: A preliminary study

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Cardiac autonomic indexes, including cardiac parasympathetic index and cardiac sympathetic index, have been reported to accurately identify patients with sleep disorders such as obstructive sleep apnea. Our study aimed to… Click to show full abstract

Cardiac autonomic indexes, including cardiac parasympathetic index and cardiac sympathetic index, have been reported to accurately identify patients with sleep disorders such as obstructive sleep apnea. Our study aimed to assess cardiac autonomic indexes in patients with obstructive sleep apnea before and during a single full‐night continuous positive airway pressure therapy using a combined approach. Our simultaneous heart rate variability‐polysomnographic study included 16 never‐treated obstructive sleep apnea patients. Two patients dropped out. Patients underwent combined recordings in two consecutive days, at baseline and during a single full‐night of acute continuous positive airway pressure treatment. We calculated cardiac parasympathetic index and cardiac sympathetic index as night/day ratio for high‐frequency and low‐frequency heart rate variability spectral components, respectively. Continuous positive airway pressure treatment significantly reduced cardiac autonomic indexes values in comparison with baseline values (cardiac parasympathetic index: p < .0001; cardiac sympathetic index: p = .001). After acute continuous positive airway pressure treatment, the percentage of decrease of cardiac parasympathetic index was greater than that of cardiac sympathetic index (51.02 ± 15.72 versus 34.64 ± 26.93). A positive statistical correlation was also found between decrease of cardiac parasympathetic index and decrease of apnea–hypopnea index after continuous positive airway pressure (p < .001). This study improves the knowledge on cardiac autonomic modulation during acute continuous positive airway pressure therapy in obstructive sleep apnea. Our results demonstrate that both autonomic indexes decreased significantly after a single‐night of acute continuous positive airway pressure therapy. Cardiac parasympathetic index more than cardiac sympathetic index was related to decrease of apnea–hypopnea index after continuous positive airway pressure therapy, thus representing a potential help in everyday clinical practice.

Keywords: cardiac parasympathetic; index; parasympathetic index; apnea; continuous positive; positive airway

Journal Title: Journal of Sleep Research
Year Published: 2019

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