scholarly journals Dissociation of Objective and Subjective Daytime Sleepiness and Biomarkers of Systemic Inflammation in Sleep-Disordered Breathing and Systolic Heart Failure

2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 1411-1422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reena Mehra ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Noah Andrews ◽  
W.H. Wilson Tang ◽  
James B. Young ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Inggriane Puspita Dewi

Prevalensi gagal jantung meningkat seiring dengan usia, dan mempengaruhi 6-10% individu lebih dari 65 tahun. Penderita gagal jantung sering mengalami hipersomnia di siang hari, tetapi kurang tidur atau sering terbangun dari tidur di malam hari karena sesak. Gangguan tidur ini dapat berupa SDB (sleep disordered breathing), DMS (difficulties maintaining sleep) dan EDS (excessive daytime sleepiness) lebih sering terjadi pada lansia dengan gagal jantung. Literature review ini bertujuan untuk menemukan bukti-bukti (evidence) kualitas tidur pada pasien gagal jantung serta penanganannya. Studi literatur dari beberapa jurnal yang bersumber dari medline, dengan kata kunci Sleep Quality dan Heart Failure, sebanyak 5 jurnal dipilih untuk direview. Hasilnya adalah kekurangan tidur pada penderita gagal jantung berdampak terhadap kualitas hidupnya, cenderung menderita depresi yang berdampak terhadap peningkatan kematian, sudden cardiac death dan ventrikuler aritmia. Penanganan berupa terapi farmakologis dan non farmakologis. Implikasi terhadap ilmu keperawatan dari masalah kualitas tidur pasien gagal jantung, diupayakan mengembangkan model terapi regimen non farmakologi, dengan mempertimbangkan aspek psikososial dan spiritual.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise M. L. Lobo ◽  
Patricia F. Trevizan ◽  
Edgar Toschi-Dias ◽  
Patricia A. Oliveira ◽  
Rafael B. Piveta ◽  
...  

ESC CardioMed ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 1829-1832
Author(s):  
Martin R Cowie

The majority of patients with heart failure have sleep-disordered breathing. There are two major types—obstructive (where the upper airway collapses, but respiratory effort continues) and central (with loss of central respiratory drive). The cyclical apnoea and hypopneas are associated with sleep disturbance, hypoxaemia, haemodynamic changes, and sympathetic activation. Heart failure patients appear to be partially protected from the daytime somnolence that usually accompanies sleep-disordered breathing, perhaps by a high level of background sympathetic activation. Patients with sleep-disordered breathing have a worse prognosis than those without. Improving the control of the heart failure syndrome can improve sleep-disordered breathing. Mask-based therapies of positive airway pressure targeted at sleep-disordered breathing can improve measures of sleep quality and partially normalize the sleep and respiratory physiology, but recent randomized trials of cardiovascular outcomes in central sleep apnoea have been neutral or have even suggested the possibility of harm, likely from increased sudden death. Further randomized outcome studies are required to determine whether mask-based treatment is appropriate for patients with chronic systolic heart failure and obstructive sleep apnoea, for those with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, and for those with decompensated heart failure. New therapies for central sleep apnoea—such as implantable phrenic nerve stimulators—also require robust assessment.


2016 ◽  
Vol 02 (01) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Marie-Pia d’Ortho ◽  
◽  
◽  
Holger Woehrle ◽  
Michael Arzt ◽  
...  

Adaptive servo-ventilation (ASV) is a form of non-invasive positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy that differs from other PAP devices. It includes features to overcome both obstructive and central sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) events. In the Treatment of Sleep-Disordered Breathing with Predominant Central Sleep Apnea by Adaptive Servo-Ventilation in Patients with Heart Failure (SERVE-HF) study, ASV significantly reduced SDB events in patients with systolic heart failure (HF) and predominant central sleep apnoea (CSA), but did not improve outcomes, and there was increased mortality risk in the ASV group. Although the SERVE-HF results represent a paradigm shift for ASV, they are only applicable to a small subset of ASV-treated patients, and there is no evidence suggesting that ASV use should stop altogether. There are a number of other indications and patient groups for whom ASV may be useful, effective and safe, including patients with treatment-emergent CSA, central apnoeas associated with long-term opioid therapy without alveolar hypoventilation, idiopathic Cheyne-Stokes respiration, after ischaemic stroke and those with HF with preserved ejection fraction. Additional research is required to better define the mechanism of increased risk associated with ASV identified in SERVE-HF and to more clearly characterise the specific patient phenotypes who benefit from ASV therapy.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document