Department of Epidemiology (L.D.L., L.B.M.), University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor.
Stroke Program (L.D.L., L.B.M., D.L.B.), University of Michigan Health System.
Stroke. 2023 Sep;54(9):2356-2365. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.042325. Epub 2023 Jul 24.
The aim of this study was to characterize change in sleep-disordered breathing severity in the year following stroke, overall, and by ethnicity, within the population-based Brain Attack Surveillance in Corpus Christi Project.
First-ever ischemic strokes (n=414) were ascertained by active and passive surveillance and validated by stroke-trained physicians. Patients with stroke were invited to participate in portable sleep apnea testing (ApneaLink Plus) at baseline and 3, 6, and 12 months poststroke. Sleep-disordered breathing severity was assessed by the respiratory event index (apneas and hypopneas/hour of recording). The component obstructive apnea index and central apnea index were also assessed. Time and ethnicity effects on outcomes, as well as ethnic differences in time effects, were analyzed using generalized estimating equations with multivariable adjustment for confounding factors.
Mean age (n=414) was 63.9 years (SD=10.9); 68.4% were Mexican American. Baseline mean respiratory event index, obstructive apnea index, and central apnea index were 21.3 (SD=16.6), 8.6 (SD=11.5), and 1.5 (SD=3.2), respectively. There was no time effect on respiratory event index (=0.35) but obstructive apnea index increased over time (<0.01). Averaged over follow-up, respiratory event index and obstructive apnea index were significantly higher in Mexican American than non-Hispanic White persons. No ethnic difference in the time effect was found for either outcome. For central apnea index, there was an ethnicity-time interaction (=0.01) such that central apnea index increased in non-Hispanic White but did not change in Mexican American persons.
Sleep-disordered breathing severity was significant and stable for most individuals in the year after stroke. These results do not confirm previous reports of diminishing sleep-disordered breathing severity over time after stroke and would support early assessment and treatment where indicated.
本研究旨在描述脑卒中标本库项目中,人群在卒中后 1 年内睡眠呼吸紊乱严重程度的变化情况,包括整体情况和按种族划分的情况。
采用主动和被动监测的方式确定首次缺血性卒中(n=414),并由经过卒中培训的医生进行验证。在卒中发生后 3、6 和 12 个月,邀请卒中患者参加便携式睡眠呼吸暂停检测(ApneaLink Plus)。通过呼吸事件指数(每小时呼吸暂停和低通气次数)评估睡眠呼吸紊乱严重程度。还评估了阻塞性呼吸暂停指数和中枢性呼吸暂停指数。使用广义估计方程分析时间和种族对结果的影响,以及种族对时间效应的差异,对混杂因素进行多变量调整。
414 名患者的平均年龄(n=414)为 63.9 岁(SD=10.9),68.4%为墨西哥裔美国人。基线时呼吸事件指数、阻塞性呼吸暂停指数和中枢性呼吸暂停指数的平均值分别为 21.3(SD=16.6)、8.6(SD=11.5)和 1.5(SD=3.2)。呼吸事件指数无时间效应(=0.35),但阻塞性呼吸暂停指数随时间增加(<0.01)。在随访期间,墨西哥裔美国人的呼吸事件指数和阻塞性呼吸暂停指数平均值显著高于非西班牙裔白人。两种结果在时间效应方面均未发现种族差异。对于中枢性呼吸暂停指数,种族与时间存在交互作用(=0.01),即非西班牙裔白种人的中枢性呼吸暂停指数增加,而墨西哥裔美国人的中枢性呼吸暂停指数未发生变化。
大多数卒中患者在卒中后 1 年内睡眠呼吸紊乱严重程度显著且稳定。这些结果与以前报道的随着时间推移,卒中后睡眠呼吸紊乱严重程度减轻的结论并不相符,这支持了在需要时进行早期评估和治疗。