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Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
Nightly bouts of interrupted, oxygen-deprived sleep
from a collapsed airway in the upper neck raises the
chances of dying in middle-aged to elderly people by as
much as 46 percent in the most severe cases, according
to a landmark study on sleep apnea by lung experts at
Johns Hopkins and six other U.S. medical centers.
Even in people with moderate forms of the sleeping
disorder, with anywhere from 15 to 30 episodes of
interrupted breathing during each hour of supposed rest,
risk of death jumps 17 percent.
The ongoing study is believed to be the largest ever
conducted into sleep and related illnesses, with the
latest report taking more than a decade to complete. The
study involves some 6,441 men and women between ages 40
and 70, with mild to severe forms of sleep apnea or none
at all. Many are self-described snorers; snoring is a
key symptom of sleep apnea.
Though anecdotal reports and medical record searches
have long hinted at the connection between sleep
problems and death, especially from heart disease, the
latest study is the first to define death from sleep
apnea by monitoring a large number of people with or
without the sleeping condition, including a high
proportion of snorers, to see who dies and who does not.
Some 1,047 deaths occurred among study participants
since the clinical investigation began. It is estimated
that 24 percent of American men and 9 percent of women
have irregular breathing patterns during sleep, with
four in five unaware that they have a problem.
As part of the so-called Sleep Heart Health Study,
researchers at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
monitored study participants' sleep patterns at home for
at least one full night's sleep, which averaged about
seven hours. More than 50 study technicians were needed
to handle the nearly 10,000 detailed recordings of
participants' breathing patterns, heart rhythms and
brain activity made to date. About half of all
participants had moderate to severe sleep apnea. They
were then tracked through annual clinic visits to gauge
any sickness or death from high blood pressure, heart
disease or stroke.
Reporting it the Public Library of Science, Medicine
online Aug. 18, researchers found that as little as 11
minutes a night " just 2 percent of an average night's
sleep of seven hours " spent in severe sleep apnea and
subsequent oxygen deprivation, in which blood oxygen
levels drop below 90 percent, doubled the death rate in
men.
Women in the study who died and had severe sleep apnea
were too few for researchers to draw a similar
conclusion at this stage in the study, but researchers
suspect that further research will bear the same
results.
"Our study results really raise concern about the
potentially harmful effects of sleep apnea," says
pulmonologist and study site principal investigator
Naresh Punjabi, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor at
the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He adds
that low blood oxygen levels during sleep are "a
particularly worrisome sign," citing the factor as the
single biggest predictor of death in people with
sleeping disorders.
"Such an increased risk of death warrants screening for
sleep apnea as part of routine health care, in which all
physicians should inquire about patients' sleeping
habits, including symptoms of feeling tired or drowsy
during the daytime, poor nighttime sleep quality,
recurrent awakenings from sleep, and reports from your
bed partner that you snore loudly or intermittently stop
breathing during the night," says Punjabi.
He says that given how widespread sleep apnea is,
acquiring this information is relatively easy and
essential for medical scientists to identify which, if
any, particular treatments work at curing the illness by
ultimately lowering the number of chronic medical
conditions and premature deaths caused by it.
Key among such treatments is use of overnight sleeping
aids, such as the CPAP (continuous positive airway
pressure) device. The device, which resembles a typical
oxygen mask, is worn over the nose and connected by a
thin tube to a machine that forces air into the nasal
passages, preventing the airways from collapsing.
"Our goal is to achieve normal breathing patterns during
sleep and maintain blood oxygen levels as close to
normal as possible," says Punjabi, who points out that
the medical standard is to always maintain blood oxygen
levels in the range of 95 percent or above.
Punjabi says the study team's next steps are to separate
causes of death due to sleep apnea, in particular,
defining the added risk from heart disease or stroke.
Funding support for the study was provided by the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, a member of
the National Institutes of Health.
Besides Punjabi, other Johns Hopkins researchers
involved in the study were Brian Caffo, Ph.D.; Philip
Smith, M.D.; Moyses Szkio, M.D., Ph.D.; and Melissa
Minotti. Johns Hopkins was also the data coordinating
center for the Sleep Heart Health Study, with additional
research assistance provided by Marie Diener-West,
Ph.D.; John Dodge; Michele Donithan, M.H.S.; Charlene
Levine, B.S.; Curtis Meinhart, Ph.D.; Nancy Min, M.H.S.,
M.P.H., Ph.D.; Michael Smith, B.S.; Andrea Tibbs, B.S.;
James Tonascia, Ph.D.; Linda Roberts, M.H.S.; and Jill
Meinert.
Other study co-investigators involved in writing the
report were James Goodwin and Eyal Shahar at the
University of Arizona, Daniel Gottlieb and George
O'Connor at Boston University, Anne Newman and David
Unruh at the University of Pittsburgh, David Rapaport at
New York University, Susan Redline at Case Western
Reserve University, Helaine Resnick at the American
Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, and
David Samet at the University of Southern California.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
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