TY - JOUR
T1 - Sleep-disordered breathing in healthy aged persons
T2 - One-year follow-up of daytime sequelae
AU - Berry, D. T.R.
AU - Phillips, B. A.
AU - Cook, Y. R.
AU - Schmitt, F. A.
AU - Honeycutt, N. A.
AU - Edwards, C. L.
AU - Lamb, D. G.
AU - Magan, L. K.
AU - Allen, R. S.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2017 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1989
Y1 - 1989
N2 - We studied the waking medical, sleep, and psychological status of 28 healthy older persons who had undergone nocturnal polysomnography and daytime assessment approximately 1-year earlier. In a previous report based on this sample, we found that sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) indices were not related to concurrent measurements of daytime functioning. However, in the present study, we observed relationships between the original SDB indices and several measures of cardiopulmonary functioning obtained 1 year later. At follow-up, subjects with originally high levels of SDB had significantly higher systolic blood pressure and poorer pulmonary function test results, were more likely to report irregular heartbeats in the previous year, and had experienced more disruptive snoring than the remaining subjects. When combined with other recent data, these results raise the possiblity that SDB exerts an insidious pathological influence on the health and daytime functioning of otherwise healthy older persons.
AB - We studied the waking medical, sleep, and psychological status of 28 healthy older persons who had undergone nocturnal polysomnography and daytime assessment approximately 1-year earlier. In a previous report based on this sample, we found that sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) indices were not related to concurrent measurements of daytime functioning. However, in the present study, we observed relationships between the original SDB indices and several measures of cardiopulmonary functioning obtained 1 year later. At follow-up, subjects with originally high levels of SDB had significantly higher systolic blood pressure and poorer pulmonary function test results, were more likely to report irregular heartbeats in the previous year, and had experienced more disruptive snoring than the remaining subjects. When combined with other recent data, these results raise the possiblity that SDB exerts an insidious pathological influence on the health and daytime functioning of otherwise healthy older persons.
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U2 - 10.1093/sleep/12.3.211
DO - 10.1093/sleep/12.3.211
M3 - Article
C2 - 2740692
AN - SCOPUS:0024384645
SN - 0161-8105
VL - 12
SP - 211
EP - 215
JO - Sleep
JF - Sleep
IS - 3
ER -