Butler Matthew P, Thosar Saurabh S, Smales Carolina, DeYoung Pamela N, Wu Huijuan, Hussain Mohammad V, Morimoto Miki, Hu Kun, Scheer Frank A J L, Shea Steven A
Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences, Oregon Health & Science University , Portland, OR, USA.
Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health & Science University , Portland, OR, USA.
Chronobiol Int. 2020 Jun;37(6):856-866. doi: 10.1080/07420528.2020.1740723. Epub 2020 Mar 20.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and a change in the 24 h pattern of adverse cardiovascular events and mortality. Adverse cardiovascular events occur more frequently in the middle of the night in people with OSA, earlier than the morning prevalence of these events in the general population. It is unknown if these changes are associated with a change in the underlying circadian rhythms, independent of behaviors such as sleep, physical activity, and meal intake. In this exploratory analysis, we studied the endogenous circadian rhythms of blood pressure, heart rate, melatonin and cortisol in 11 participants (48 ± 4 years; seven with OSA) throughout a 5 day study that was originally designed to examine circadian characteristics of obstructive apnea events. After a baseline night, participants completed 10 recurring 5 h 20 min behavioral cycles divided evenly into standardized sleep and wake periods. Blood pressure and heart rate were recorded in a relaxed semirecumbent posture 15 minutes after each scheduled wake time. Salivary melatonin and cortisol concentrations were measured at 1-1.5 h intervals during wakefulness. Mixed-model cosinor analyses were performed to determine the rhythmicity of all variables with respect to external time and separately to circadian phases (aligned to the dim light melatonin onset, DLMO). The circadian rhythm of blood pressure peaked much later in OSA compared to control participants (group × circadian phase, < .05); there was also a trend toward a slightly delayed cortisol rhythm in the OSA group. Rhythms of heart rate and melatonin did not differ between the groups. In this exploratory analysis, OSA appears to be associated with a phase change (relative to DLMO) in the endogenous circadian rhythm of blood pressure during relaxed wakefulness, independent of common daily behaviors.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)与高血压、心血管疾病以及24小时不良心血管事件和死亡率模式的改变有关。OSA患者的不良心血管事件在午夜更为频繁地发生,早于一般人群中这些事件的早晨患病率。尚不清楚这些变化是否与潜在的昼夜节律变化有关,而独立于睡眠、身体活动和饮食摄入等行为。在这项探索性分析中,我们在一项为期5天的研究中,对11名参与者(48±4岁;7名患有OSA)的血压、心率、褪黑素和皮质醇的内源性昼夜节律进行了研究,该研究最初旨在检查阻塞性呼吸暂停事件的昼夜特征。在基线夜之后,参与者完成10个重复的5小时20分钟行为周期,平均分为标准化的睡眠和清醒期。在每次预定的清醒时间后15分钟,以放松的半卧位姿势记录血压和心率。在清醒期间,每隔1 - 1.5小时测量唾液褪黑素和皮质醇浓度。进行混合模型余弦分析以确定所有变量相对于外部时间以及分别相对于昼夜相位(与暗光褪黑素开始时间,DLMO对齐)的节律性。与对照组参与者相比,OSA患者的血压昼夜节律峰值出现得晚得多(组×昼夜相位,<0.05);OSA组的皮质醇节律也有稍微延迟的趋势。两组之间的心率和褪黑素节律没有差异。在这项探索性分析中,OSA似乎与放松清醒期间血压的内源性昼夜节律的相位变化(相对于DLMO)有关,独立于常见的日常行为。