Patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) experience repetitive nocturnal oscillations of systemic arterial pressure that occur in association with changes in respiration and changes in sleep state. To investigate cardiac function during the cycle of obstruction (apnea) and resumption of ventilation (recovery), we continuously measured left ventricular stroke volume (LVSV) and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) during non-rapid-eye-movement sleep in six males with severe OSA (apnea/hypopnea index > or = 30 events/h associated with oxygen saturation < 82%). LVSV was assessed continuously using an ambulatory ventricular function monitor (VEST; Capintec). The apnea-recovery cycle was divided into three phases: 1) early apnea (EA), 2) late apnea (LA), and 3) recovery (Rec). In all subjects recovery was associated with an abrupt decrease in LVSV [54.0 +/- 14.5 (SD) ml] compared with either EA (91.4 +/- 14.7 ml; P < 0.001) or LA (77.1 +/- 15.2 ml; P < 0.005). Although heart rate increased with recovery, the increase was not sufficient to compensate for the decrease in LVSV so that cardiac output (CO) fell (EA: 6,247 +/- 739 ml/min; LA: 5,741 +/- 1,094 ml/min; Rec: 4,601 +/- 1,249 ml/min; EA vs. Rec, P < 0.01; LA vs. Rec, P < 0.025). Recovery was also associated with a significant increase in MAP. We speculate that such abrupt decreases in LVSV and CO at apnea termination, occurring coincident with the nadir of oxygen saturation, may further compromise tissue oxygen delivery.
Patients with obstructive sleep apnea experience nocturnal hemodynamic oscillations in association with repetitive respiratory events. Apnea termination (recovery) is accompanied by the nadir of arterial O2 saturation (SaO2), changes in intrathoracic pressure, and arousal from sleep. To investigate separately the contributions of hypoxemia and of arousal from sleep to changes in cardiac function, we continuously measured left ventricular stroke volume (LVSV) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) in eight subjects with severe obstructive sleep apnea (apnea-hypopnea index > 30 events/h associated with SaO2 < or = 82%) during two experimental conditions: 1) subjects slept without intervention for 1-2 h and then supplemental O2 was administered to maintain SaO2 > or = 90% (mean SaO2 nadir 92.7%) throughout the apnea-recovery cycle and 2) upper airway obstructions were abolished using nasal continuous positive airway pressure and subjects were aroused from sleep by an auditory signal. Recovery was associated with an increase in MAP and a decrease in LVSV both with and without supplemental O2. Arousal from sleep on nasal continuous positive airway pressure reproduced the postapneic elevation of MAP but not a decrease in cardiac function of the magnitude that occurred at apnea termination. We conclude that elevation of blood pressure and reduction of LVSV that occurred at apnea termination may be due to different physiological mechanisms.
A 29-year-old Japanese male with a 19-year history of subcutaneous eosinophilic lymphoid granuloma (Kimura’s disease) was referred to the Nephrology Service of the Nihon University Hospital for evaluation of edema and massive proteinuria. The renal biopsy disclosed minimal glomerular lesions. In this paper a case of nephrotic syndrome associated with eosinophilic lymphoid granuloma is reported.
Suppressor cell activity (SCA) was analyzed in 8 patients with focal glomerular sclerosis (FGS) and 11 patients with chronic proliferative glomerulonephritis (CGN). We have assessed the ability of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) stimulated by concanavalin A (Con A) to inhibit the proliferative response of normal allogeneic lymphocytes by both Con A and phytohemagglutinin (PHA). It was found that the FGS patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) had significantly increased levels of suppression index when compared to the values obtained with normal controls. In contrast, the mean suppression values in the PBL from FGS patients in remission and CGN patients with or without NS, whether the mitogen used was Con A or PHA, were similar to those of the control subjects. Thus, the majority of FGS patients with NS demonstrated an alteration in Con A-induced SCA. The possible significance of these phenomena in the pathophysiology of FGS is discussed.
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