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Abstract Introduction Sleep disordered breathing (SDB: obstructive (2) compare the clinical and demographic characteristics between groups with COMISA, insomnia, SDB, and normal sleep; and (3) examine the risk of COMISA in the presence of normal sleep, insomnia, SDB and other clinical and demographic characteristics. Methods Secondary analysis of an observational study of sleep among adults with stable HF. COMISA was defined as an apnea hypopnea index (AHI) 15 with difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep or waking too early in the morning (Insomnia). We measured self-reported (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index) and objective sleep characteristics (polysomnography – PSG), symptoms (depression, sleepiness); used chi-square and ANOVA; and calculated the risks of COMISA for normal sleepers and with insomnia or SDB under different conditions (depression, poor sleep quality, left ventricular ejection fraction, age, race, and sex). Results The sample included 170 (M age = 60.3 ± 16.8 years; n = 60 (35% female. They had normal sleep (n = 37/22%); insomnia only (n = 48/28%): SDB only (n = 46/27%); and COMISA (n = 39/23%). Those with COMISA were significantly more likely to be obese (32.1%) compared to others 13.6% -29.6%, p = 0.0128. They had the shortest total sleep time (TST) (mean = 291 ± 109 mins) and poorest sleep efficiency (M = 65.8 ± 20.5%) (p = .05). Women with insomnia were less likely to have COMISA than men (36% vs. 51%), while 74% of adults with SDB who were depressed had COMISA, compared with 41% of those with insomnia. Conclusion Risk of COMISA is associated with depression and poor sleep among adults with stable HF and SDB. Future study is needed to better understand the risks of COMISA among adults with chronic HF outcomes and to address the need for intervention that addresses it beyond a focus on only SDB or insomnia. Support (if any)
LaFleur et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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