Sleep Apnea and Hypertension.
Gino SeravalleGuido GrassiPublished in: High blood pressure & cardiovascular prevention : the official journal of the Italian Society of Hypertension (2021)
Obstructive sleep apnea is a frequent finding in clinical practice especially with the obesity epidemic and the growing awareness of sleep-disordered breathing as a potential and treatable risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. It frequently coexists undiagnosed activating pathophysiological mechanisms known to participate in development and progression of cardiovascular diseases and resistance to therapeutical strategies. The sympathetic activation and the baroreflex and chemoreflex impairment appear to be the main pathophysiological factors that activating several mechanisms elicit cardiac and vascular damage. Data from cross-sectional population-based studies, prospective studies and meta-analysis have clearly shown the implication of OSA in the development of the hypertensive state and the benefits obtained by continuous positive airway pressure on daytime blood pressure and cardiovascular risk.
Keyphrases
- positive airway pressure
- obstructive sleep apnea
- sleep apnea
- blood pressure
- cardiovascular disease
- cross sectional
- clinical practice
- signaling pathway
- hypertensive patients
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- case control
- heart rate
- weight loss
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- risk assessment
- coronary artery disease
- electronic health record
- skeletal muscle
- high fat diet induced
- artificial intelligence