SLEEP-EVAL© RESEARCH

Sleep Epidemiology Research & Sleep-EVALTM Diagnosis Expert System


Stanford Sleep Epidemiology Journal

Stanford Sleep Epidemiology Research Center (SSERC)

Psy-EVAL Research

 

"Not everything that can be counted counts,
and not everything that counts can be counted."
Albert
Einstein


 

Sleep Apnea & Hypertension

First created | 05/04/2000

Last edited   | 05/11/2012

Adapted by Maurice M. Ohayon, MD, DSc, PhD

Reference to cite: Ohayon MM, Guilleminault C, Priest RG, Zulley J. Smirne, S: Is sleep-disordered breathing an independent risk factor for hypertension in the general population (13,057 subjects)? Psychosom Res; 2000; 48:593-601.

 

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome is an independent risk factor (odds ratio: 9.7) for hypertension. Snoring and breathing pauses during sleep appeared to be non-significant predictive factors.The relationship between Sleep-Disordered Breathing and Hypertension is a major issue requiring elucidation, especially as appropriate treatment of the former may help control or even protect against the latter

 

However, the literature review on this topic raises many ambiguities:

  •  with several pathologies and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), a specific clinical entity associated with a polysomnographic pattern (apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) >five apneas plus hypopneas per hour of sleep) and characterized by daytime sleepiness or insomnia but dissociated from obesity.
    This conceptual misunderstanding has prevailed since the 1970s [Guilleminault et al., 1997; Coccagna et al., 1972; Guilleminault et al., 1973;  Guilleminault et al., 1975].
    Recent reviews [Fletcher, 1995; Wright  et al., 1997] regarding the association between hypertension and sleep-disordered breathing failed to make the distinction between OSAS and multi-morbid syndromes associating obesity and OSA.
    Therefore, the relationship between obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and hypertension remains poorly defined.

  •  In addition to this problem of terminology, general population studies of hypertension and sleep-disordered breathing are rare.
    Gislason et al. [1993] explored this association in a representative sample of the Swedish male population.

  • Although other studies may involve large samples, as was the case with the Wisconsin sleep cohort [Young et al., 1993] and the Busselton cohort in Australia [Bearpark et al., 1995], findings were applied to the general population only through secondary extrapolation which may or may not be valid depending on the initial population.

  •  Finally, the identification of confounding variables may impact the association between sleep-disordered breathing and hypertension.
    Obesity, smoking and alcohol consumption are not always considered and are often inadequately assessed [Levinson et al., 1991]. Moreover, life stress, which may be equally important, has not been included in any study to date.

Consequently, we decided to assess the relationship between hypertension and three forms of sleep-disordered breathing: namely, chronic snoring, breathing pauses and OSAS, in the course of telephone surveys undertaken in the general populations of the UK, Germany and Italy.

 

 

Research

 

This report presents the results obtained after controlling for confounding variables:
   
Age,
   
body mass index,
   
alcohol,

     smoking,
   
life stress,
   
heart diseases,

     renal diseases.
 

The relationship between hypertension and three forms of sleep-disordered breathing (chronic snoring, breathing pauses and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome) was assessed using representative samples of the non-institutionalized population of the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy (159 millions inhabitants).
 

The samples were comprised of 13,057 individuals aged 15-100 years who were interviewed about their sleeping habits and their sleep symptoms over the telephone using the Sleep-EVAL system.

 

 

Results

 

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome was found in:

  • 1.9% (95% CI: 1.2% to 2.3%) of the UK sample,

  • 1.8% (95% CI: 1.4% to 2.2%) of the German sample and

  • 1.1% (95% CI: 0.8% to 1.4%) of the Italian sample.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome was an independent risk factor (odds ratio: 9.7) for hypertension after controlling for possible confounding effects of age, gender, obesity, smoking, alcohol consumption, life stress, and, heart and renal disease.

 

Snoring and breathing pauses during sleep appeared to be non-significant predictive factors.

 

 

Content of this page is extracted from:

Ohayon MM, Guilleminault C, Priest RG, Zulley J. Smirne, S: Is sleep-disordered breathing an independent risk factor for hypertension in the general population (13,057 subjects)? J  Psychosom Res; 2000; 48:593-601.

More Information

 

Dyssomnias
Dyssomnias are sleep disorders characterized by abnormalities in the quantity, quality or timing of sleep

 

Breathing Disorders
Sleep disordered breathing encompasses a spectrum of conditions whose common feature is intermittent loss of upper airway patency associated with sleep

 

Hypersomnia (disabled)

 

Insomnia
More than fifty studies of insomnia based on data collected in various representative community-dwelling samples or populations were published with highly variable rates

 

Excessive Daytime Sleepiness
Prevalence of daytime sleepiness has been reported to range from 0.5% to about 40%

 

Narcolepsy
This syndrome is characterized by an imperative need to sleep suddenly and for brief periods, recurring at more or less close intervals

 

Periodic Limb Movement
This syndrome is characterized by periodic episodes of repetitive limb movements caused by contractions of the muscles during sleep

 

Restless Legs Syndrome
Restless legs syndrome, initially reported by Ekbom (1944), is characterized by disagreeable leg sensations occurring most often at sleep onset that provoke an urge to move the legs