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      Sleep Apnea and Cardiovascular Disease: An Enigmatic Risk Factor.

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          Abstract

          Synchronization of molecular, metabolic, and cardiovascular circadian oscillations is fundamental to human health. Sleep-disordered breathing, which disrupts such temporal congruence, elicits hemodynamic, autonomic, chemical, and inflammatory disturbances with acute and long-term consequences for heart, brain, and circulatory and metabolic function. Sleep apnea afflicts a substantial proportion of adult men and women but is more prevalent in those with established cardiovascular diseases and especially fluid-retaining states. Despite the experimental, epidemiological, observational, and interventional evidence assembled in support of these concepts, this substantial body of work has had relatively modest pragmatic impact, thus far, on the discipline of cardiology. Contemporary estimates of cardiovascular risk still are derived typically from data acquired during wakefulness. The impact of sleep-related breathing disorders rarely is entered into such calculations or integrated into diagnostic disease-specific algorithms or therapeutic recommendations. Reasons for this include absence of apnea-related symptoms in most with cardiovascular disease, impediments to efficient diagnosis at the population level, debate as to target, suboptimal therapies, difficulties mounting large randomized trials of sleep-specific interventions, and the challenging results of those few prospective cardiovascular outcome trials that have been completed and reported. The objectives of this review are to delineate the bidirectional interrelationship between sleep-disordered breathing and cardiovascular disease, consider the findings and implications of observational and randomized trials of treatment, frame the current state of clinical equipoise, identify principal current controversies and potential paths to their resolution, and anticipate future directions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Circ. Res.
          Circulation research
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          1524-4571
          0009-7330
          Jun 08 2018
          : 122
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] From the University Health Network and Sinai Health System Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. john.floras@utoronto.ca.
          Article
          CIRCRESAHA.118.310783
          10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.118.310783
          29880501
          5d339470-fe4d-431e-8cf6-ce43a7bc2b91
          History

          cardiovascular risk factors,heart failure,humans,sleep apnea, central,sleep apnea, obstructive

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