Recent decades have seen the publication of numerous studies on the association between excessive sleep disordered breathing (SDB), particularly sleep apnoea, and an increase in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. These studies have used a wide range of methodologies and criteria for patient inclusion. The results have been diverse, depending on the type of cardiovascular event or risk factor investigated, the patients' cardiovascular risk, the severity or type of the SDB, and the analysis of the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular events [1].Sleep apnoea is a disease capable of activating (mainly via intermittent hypoxaemia and sleep fragmentation and their consequences) several pathophysiological mechanisms not exclusive to cardiovascular disease, such as sympathetic hyperactivity, pro-inflammatory state, hypercoagulability, oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction and immune dysfunction [1]. It therefore seems logical to suppose that excessive SDB could also be associated with the incidence, severity and prognosis of other noncardiovascular diseases, even in patients with a high cardiovascular risk. Along these lines, some studies in recent years have examined the association between sleep apnoea and other less investigated diseases, such as autoimmune diseases [2], cancer [3] and various infectious diseases [4].In the current issue of the European Respiratory Journal, RUPPRECHT et al. [5] publish the results of a study that examined a group of patients with high cardiovascular risk who had recently undergone elective coronary bypass graft surgery (CABG), to analyse the impact of pre-operative excessive SDB on parameters, such as the incidence of respiratory infections and complications, which are not exclusively cardiovascular but are extremely important in the immediate post-operative period. Although the study's main outcome (a broad composite of variables associated with post-operative mortality and a range of post-operative complications) showed no discrepancy between the group with excessive SDB and the group with a normal or near-normal SDB, this was not true of the incidence of sepsis and pneumonia, which were higher, particularly in the untreated forms of moderate to severe sleep apnoea. This association between sleep apnoea and various infections, already demonstrated by other previous studies [4,6,7], emphasises the importance of moving beyond an exclusive focus on the analysis of the cardiovascular impact of sleep apnoea (even in patients with a high cardiovascular risk, as in the study in question) and exploring other possibilities in which SDB could have potentially preventable or treatable consequences.There is a sufficiently plausible biological explanation for an increase in the number of post-operative infectious complications in patients with sleep apnoea. The coordination between respiration and swallowing