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Sleep apnea kills after midnight, study finds Article

Sleep apnea kills after midnight, study finds

Patients more likely to suffer heart attacks in early hours
===============================================

Patients with sleep apnea are more likely to die from heart attacks at night, while sleeping, than in the day, which
is the time when everyone else is most vulnerable, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.

Most heart attacks take place between dawn and noon in the United States but sleep apnea -- marked by a tendency to
snore, stop breathing and then startle awake -- changes this pattern, the researchers found.

What is still not clear is how much sleep apnea raises the risk of premature death overall, the researchers wrote in
this week's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Our study cannot address the question of whether obstructive sleep apnea increases the overall risk of sudden death
from cardiac causes,” Dr. Virend Somers of the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in Rochester, Minn., and colleagues
wrote.

As many as one in four Americans suffer from some degree of apnea, where the throat repeatedly closes during sleep,
causing breathing to stop for 10 to 30 seconds during sleep and oxygen levels to fall dramatically.

The condition, more common in men and the obese, causes stress on the heart and makes people tired during the day.

===============================================
Vulnerable at night
===============================================

The study of 112 Minnesota residents with diagnosed sleep apnea who died suddenly from cardiac causes found they were
far more likely to die between midnight and 6 a.m..

More than half died between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. -- usually the time when people are the least likely to die of heart
problems.

However, apnea sufferers were only half as likely to suffer a fatal heart attack between 6 a.m. and noon, the time
when everyone else is most vulnerable.

And from noon to 6 p.m., the risk of sudden death from heart attack was only 30 percent of what it was for people
without apnea.

“We didn't show that sleep apnea increases the risk of sudden death at all. It changes the time,” Somers, a
cardiologist, said in a telephone interview.

A much larger study of about 12,000 people now underway may reveal if death is more common among apnea sufferers. “In
18 months or so we should have an answer,” he said.

The new study raises several questions.

Many of the people with apnea had been given machines that use air forced through a face mask to keep the throat
open. Although the death rate was higher during sleep, that does not mean the machines were not effective, Somers
said.

The researchers had no way of knowing how many patients were actually using the devices, especially on the morning
they died.

Generally, two in five patients don't use their machines regularly, he said.

People may say they want to die in their sleep, Somers said, “but sleep is such a relatively passive state. If you go
through all the stresses of daytime and you don't die, why should you die at all during sleep?”

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