Leuenberger Urs A, Brubaker Derick, Quraishi Sadeq A, Hogeman Cynthia S, Imadojemu Virginia A, Gray Kristen S
Division of Cardiology, MC H047, The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, P.O. Box 850, Hershey, PA 17033, United States.
Auton Neurosci. 2005 Aug 31;121(1-2):87-93. doi: 10.1016/j.autneu.2005.06.003.
Sympathetic nerve activity and arterial pressure are frequently elevated in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). The mechanisms responsible for chronic sympathetic activation and hypertension in OSA are unknown. To determine whether repetitive apneas raise sympathetic nerve activity and/or arterial pressure, awake and healthy young subjects performed voluntary end-expiratory apneas for 20 s per min for 30 min (room air apneas). To accentuate intermittent hypoxia, in a separate group of subjects, hypoxic gas (inspired O2 10%) was added to the inspiratory port for 20 s before each apnea (hypoxic apneas). Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA, peroneal microneurography) were determined before and up to 30 min following the repetitive apneas. Following 30 hypoxic apneas (O2 saturation nadir 83.1+/-1.2%), MSNA increased from 17.4+/-2.7 to 23.4+/-2.5 bursts/min and from 164+/-28 to 240+/-35 arbitrary units respectively (P<0.01 for both; n=10) and remained elevated while MAP increased transiently from 80.5+/-3.7 to 83.1+/-3.9 mm Hg (P<0.05; n=11). In contrast, in the subjects who performed repetitive apneas during room air exposure (O2 saturation nadir 95.1+/-0.8%), MAP and MSNA did not change (n=8). End-tidal CO2 post-apnea, an index of apnea-induced hypercapnia, was similar in the 2 groups. In a separate control group, no effect of time on MAP or MSNA was noted (n=7). Thus, repetitive hypoxic apneas result in sustained sympathetic activation and a transient elevation of blood pressure. These effects appear to be due to intermittent hypoxia and may play a role in the sympathetic activation and hypertension in OSA.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者的交感神经活动和动脉压常常升高。OSA 中导致慢性交感神经激活和高血压的机制尚不清楚。为了确定反复呼吸暂停是否会提高交感神经活动和/或动脉压,清醒且健康的年轻受试者每分钟进行 20 秒的自主呼气末呼吸暂停,共持续 30 分钟(室内空气呼吸暂停)。为了加重间歇性缺氧,在另一组受试者中,在每次呼吸暂停前 20 秒将低氧气体(吸入氧浓度 10%)添加到吸气端口(低氧呼吸暂停)。在反复呼吸暂停前及之后长达 30 分钟内测定平均动脉压(MAP)和肌肉交感神经活动(MSNA,腓骨微神经ography)。在 30 次低氧呼吸暂停后(氧饱和度最低点 83.1±1.2%),MSNA 分别从 17.4±2.7 次/分钟增加到 23.4±2.5 次/分钟,从 164±28 个任意单位增加到 240±35 个任意单位(两者均 P<0.01;n = 10),并持续升高,而 MAP 从 80.5±3.7 毫米汞柱短暂升高至 83.1±3.9 毫米汞柱(P<0.05;n = 11)。相比之下,在室内空气暴露期间进行反复呼吸暂停的受试者(氧饱和度最低点 95.1±0.8%),MAP 和 MSNA 没有变化(n = 8)。呼吸暂停后的呼气末二氧化碳,作为呼吸暂停诱导的高碳酸血症指标,在两组中相似。在一个单独的对照组中,未观察到时间对 MAP 或 MSNA 的影响(n = 7)。因此,反复低氧呼吸暂停会导致持续的交感神经激活和血压短暂升高。这些影响似乎是由于间歇性缺氧,可能在 OSA 的交感神经激活和高血压中起作用。