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Breathing and Heart
Problem Often Seen Together
A breathing problem called sleep apnea
syndrome (SAS) seems to be common in patients with a heart condition
called atrial fibrillation. Still, it is unclear whether the rate
of SAS is any higher than that seen in healthy people.
SAS is a potentially serious problem
that involves brief periods of absent breathing during sleep.
Atrial fibrillation is a rhythm problem of the heart in which
the upper chambers, or atria, beat fast and irregularly.
According to several studies, SAS
predisposes patients to heart rhythm problems, but the rate of
SAS in specific conditions has not been determined, Dr. Kimmo
Markus Porthan, of Helsinki University Central Hospital, in Finland,
and colleagues write in the medical journal Chest.
In the new study, the researchers
examined the rate of SAS in 59 patients with atrial fibrillation
and in 56 similar subjects without heart problems. The average
age of all subjects was 59 years.
Thirty-two percent of atrial fibrillation
patients had SAS, a high rate but not that much different from
the percentage in the healthy group--29 percent.
Compared with men in the healthy
group, those in the atrial fibrillation group had larger necks,
a well-known risk factor for SAS. Also, patients in the atrial
fibrillation group had more severe SAS symptoms, such as daytime
tiredness and nightly breathing pauses.
"The higher prevalence of well-known
risk factors for (SAS) in patients with atrial fibrillation does
suggest that this relationship needs further study," the authors
conclude.
Reference
Source 89
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