Shepard J W
Med Clin North Am. 1985 Nov;69(6):1243-64. doi: 10.1016/s0025-7125(16)30985-3.
Sleep in normal individuals is associated with mild alveolar hypoventilation, which results in 2 to 8 mm Hg increases in PaCO2 and 3 to 11 mm Hg reductions in PaO2, which decreases mean arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation by less than 2 per cent. Arterial blood pressure and heart rate consistently decrease during sleep, and cardiac output either decreases or remains unchanged. Greater variability in these hemodynamic variables occurs during REM than during NREM sleep. Cyclical fluctuations in ventilation, blood pressure, and heart rate have been observed in normal subjects, and fewer than five apneas per hour sleep is considered to be normal. In patients with obstructive sleep apnea, reductions in SaO2 that occur with apneas and hypopneas are highly variable within and between individuals. Multiple variables interact to determine the severity of the episodes of oxyhemoglobin desaturation that are associated with cyclical changes in heart rate and systemic blood pressure. The magnitude of the increase in systemic pressure is related to the severity of the oxyhemoglobin desaturation, with mean elevations in systolic and diastolic pressures being on the order of 25 per cent. However, the magnitude of the systemic pressor response to oxygen desaturation varies widely between individuals. Pulmonary artery pressure often increases with sequential apneas to substantially elevated values, and this increase in combination with the large negative intrathoracic pressures generated during obstructive apneas increases ventricular afterload. Alterations in stroke volume and cardiac output in response to the dynamic events that occur with apneas have not been adequately investigated. Reductions in heart rate that occur during apneas are related to the severity of the oxyhemoglobin desaturation and the arterial chemoreceptor-mediated increase in vagal efferent activity. Marked sinus bradycardia, sinus pauses of 2 to 13 seconds' duration, second-degree heart block, and ventricular tachyarrhythmias have all been associated with severe arterial hypoxemia. Sudden death during sleep in obstructive sleep apnea presumably results from a lethal cardiac arrhythmia, but the relative contributions of severe bradyarrhythmias and ventricular tachyarrhythmias are unknown.
正常个体睡眠时伴有轻度肺泡通气不足,导致动脉血二氧化碳分压(PaCO2)升高2至8毫米汞柱,动脉血氧分压(PaO2)降低3至11毫米汞柱,平均动脉血氧血红蛋白饱和度降低不到2%。睡眠期间动脉血压和心率持续下降,心输出量要么下降,要么保持不变。与非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠相比,快速眼动(REM)睡眠期间这些血流动力学变量的变异性更大。在正常受试者中观察到通气、血压和心率的周期性波动,每小时睡眠中呼吸暂停少于5次被认为是正常的。在阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停患者中,呼吸暂停和呼吸不足时发生的血氧饱和度(SaO2)降低在个体内部和个体之间差异很大。多个变量相互作用,决定了与心率和全身血压周期性变化相关的氧合血红蛋白去饱和发作的严重程度。全身压力升高的幅度与氧合血红蛋白去饱和的严重程度相关,收缩压和舒张压的平均升高幅度约为25%。然而,个体之间对氧去饱和的全身升压反应幅度差异很大。随着连续的呼吸暂停,肺动脉压常常升高到相当高的值,这种升高与阻塞性呼吸暂停期间产生的巨大胸内负压相结合,增加了心室后负荷。关于呼吸暂停时发生的动态事件对每搏输出量和心输出量的影响尚未得到充分研究。呼吸暂停期间心率的降低与氧合血红蛋白去饱和的严重程度以及动脉化学感受器介导的迷走神经传出活动增加有关。明显的窦性心动过缓、持续2至13秒的窦性停搏、二度房室传导阻滞和室性快速心律失常都与严重的动脉低氧血症有关。阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停患者睡眠期间的猝死可能是由致命的心律失常引起的,但严重缓慢性心律失常和室性快速心律失常的相对作用尚不清楚。