Carreras Alba, Zhang Shelley X, Peris Eduard, Qiao Zhuanhong, Gileles-Hillel Alex, Li Richard C, Wang Yang, Gozal David
Section of Pediatric Sleep Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Comer Children's Hospital, Pritzker School of Medicine, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
Sleep. 2014 Nov 1;37(11):1817-24. doi: 10.5665/sleep.4178.
Sleep fragmentation (SF) is a common occurrence and constitutes a major characteristic of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). SF has been implicated in multiple OSA-related morbidities, but it is unclear whether SF underlies any of the cardiovascular morbidities of OSA. We hypothesized that long-term SF exposures may lead to endothelial dysfunction and altered vessel wall structure.
Adult male C57BL/6J mice were fed normal chow and exposed to daylight SF or control sleep (CTL) for 20 weeks. Telemetric blood pressure and endothelial function were assessed weekly using a modified laser-Doppler hyperemic test. Atherosclerotic plaques, elastic fiber disruption, lumen area, wall thickness, foam cells, and macrophage recruitment, as well as expression of senescence-associated markers were examined in excised aortas. Increased latencies to reach baseline perfusion levels during the post-occlusive period emerged in SF mice with increased systemic BP values starting at 8 weeks of SF and persisting thereafter. No obvious atherosclerotic plaques emerged, but marked elastic fiber disruption and fiber disorganization were apparent in SF-exposed mice, along with increases in the number of foam cells and macrophages in the aorta wall. Senescence markers showed reduced TERT and cyclin A and increased p16INK4a expression, with higher IL-6 plasma levels in SF-exposed mice.
Long-term sleep fragmentation induces vascular endothelial dysfunction and mild blood pressure increases. Sleep fragmentation also leads to morphologic vessel changes characterized by elastic fiber disruption and disorganization, increased recruitment of inflammatory cells, and altered expression of senescence markers, thereby supporting a role for sleep fragmentation in the cardiovascular morbidity of OSA.
睡眠片段化(SF)是一种常见现象,是阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的主要特征。SF与多种OSA相关疾病有关,但尚不清楚SF是否是OSA心血管疾病的病因。我们假设长期暴露于睡眠片段化可能导致内皮功能障碍和血管壁结构改变。
成年雄性C57BL/6J小鼠喂食正常食物,暴露于日光下的睡眠片段化环境或对照睡眠(CTL)环境20周。每周使用改良的激光多普勒充血试验评估遥测血压和内皮功能。在切除的主动脉中检查动脉粥样硬化斑块、弹性纤维破坏、管腔面积、壁厚度、泡沫细胞和巨噬细胞募集,以及衰老相关标志物的表达。在睡眠片段化小鼠中,闭塞后达到基线灌注水平的延迟增加,全身血压值从睡眠片段化8周开始升高,并持续升高。未出现明显的动脉粥样硬化斑块,但在暴露于睡眠片段化的小鼠中,明显可见弹性纤维破坏和纤维紊乱,同时主动脉壁中泡沫细胞和巨噬细胞数量增加。衰老标志物显示TERT和细胞周期蛋白A减少,p16INK4a表达增加,暴露于睡眠片段化的小鼠血浆IL-6水平更高。
长期睡眠片段化会导致血管内皮功能障碍和轻度血压升高。睡眠片段化还会导致血管形态改变,其特征为弹性纤维破坏和紊乱、炎症细胞募集增加以及衰老标志物表达改变,从而支持睡眠片段化在OSA心血管疾病中的作用。