Sleep Disorders Trigger Heart Attacks - Obstructive sleep
apnea or sleep disturbances are usually characterized by snoring raises risk of
heart attack at night than during the day. Similarly, a study reveals. New
research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, it
says that those who had a heart attack while sleeping at night is usually
triggered by the presence of obstructive sleep apnea. This conclusion was made
based on observations on 92 people who had experienced a heart attack.
What is Obstructive sleep apnea
Obstructive sleep apnea is a condition in which pauses in
breathing occur during sleep because the airway has become narrowed, blocked,
or floppy.
A pause in breathing is referred to as an apnea episode.
Almost everyone has brief apnea episodes while they sleep.In people who have
obstructive sleep apnea, or breathing air lines blocked at the top of part or
all of the respiratory tract that causes disturbed, choked up several times
during the night.
A person who has obstructive sleep apnea often is not aware
of the apnea episodes during the night. Often, family members witness the
periods of apnea.
Person with obstructive sleep apnea usually begins snoring
heavily soon after falling asleep. Often the snoring gets louder. The snoring
is then interrupted by a long silent period during which there is no breathing.
This is followed by a loud snort and gasp, as the person attempts to breathe and this pattern repeats. (source: www.nlm.nih.gov)
The patients are carefully observed, when the heart attack
began. They also studied sleep patterns in a sleep laboratory for 17 days after
a heart attack. The result of 64 patients suffering from obstructive sleep
apnea.
The patients with or without sleep disorders almost equally
had a history of ever using drugs and has the same background risk. But each
has a different time when having a heart attack. Those who have obstructive
sleep apnea were six times more risk of heart attack at night from midnight
until 6 o'clock in the morning than during the day. Conversely, those who do
not have a snoring disorder is usually experiencing a heart attack even in the
morning (6 am) until late afternoon.
Obstructive sleep apnea "can be a trigger" the emergence of a heart attack, the scientists wrote, who is a member of Dr.. Fatima Kuniyoshi, PhD. Kuniyoshi The team is then continued his research to see if the handle is obstructive sleep apnea can reduce the risk of heart attack.
Obstructive sleep apnea "can be a trigger" the emergence of a heart attack, the scientists wrote, who is a member of Dr.. Fatima Kuniyoshi, PhD. Kuniyoshi The team is then continued his research to see if the handle is obstructive sleep apnea can reduce the risk of heart attack.
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