Interplay of Weight Status and Sleep Autonomic Function in Mediating and Moderating the Link Between Disease Severity and Blood Pressure in Paediatric Obstructive Sleep Apnoea.
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in children is associated with numerous adverse outcomes, including elevated blood pressure. While the associations between OSA, obesity, and autonomic dysfunction are recognised, the precise mechanisms linking these factors and their relationship with elevated blood pressure in children remain unclear.
Methods: This retrospective case series included 76 children with OSA. The relationships between night-time systolic and diastolic blood pressures, body mass index, and clinical, polysomnographic, and sleep heart rate variability variables were investigated. Mediation and moderation analyses were performed.
Results: Correlation analyses revealed significant associations between both systolic and diastolic blood pressures with body mass index, age, sex, adenoidal-nasopharyngeal ratio, apnoea-hypopnoea index, and sleep low frequency/high frequency (LF/HF) ratio. In multivariable linear regression models, body mass index, adenoidal-nasopharyngeal ratio, and LF/HF ratio were independently associated with systolic blood pressure, while body mass index and adenoidal-nasopharyngeal ratio were independently associated with diastolic blood pressure. Mediation and moderation analyses identified a conceptual mediation with a moderated direct path model in which body mass index mediated, and the LF/HF ratio moderated, the relationship between apnoea-hypopnoea index and systolic blood pressure. Additionally, children with concomitant OSA and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder had a significantly higher LF/HF ratio than those with OSA alone.
Conclusion: In children with OSA, the relationship between apnoea-hypopnoea index and systolic blood pressure was mediated by weight status and modulated by sleep sympathovagal balance. Children with OSA and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder exhibited greater disturbances in sympathovagal balance. Further research is warranted to explore these associations.
期刊介绍:
Clinical Otolaryngology is a bimonthly journal devoted to clinically-oriented research papers of the highest scientific standards dealing with:
current otorhinolaryngological practice
audiology, otology, balance, rhinology, larynx, voice and paediatric ORL
head and neck oncology
head and neck plastic and reconstructive surgery
continuing medical education and ORL training
The emphasis is on high quality new work in the clinical field and on fresh, original research.
Each issue begins with an editorial expressing the personal opinions of an individual with a particular knowledge of a chosen subject. The main body of each issue is then devoted to original papers carrying important results for those working in the field. In addition, topical review articles are published discussing a particular subject in depth, including not only the opinions of the author but also any controversies surrounding the subject.
• Negative/null results
In order for research to advance, negative results, which often make a valuable contribution to the field, should be published. However, articles containing negative or null results are frequently not considered for publication or rejected by journals. We welcome papers of this kind, where appropriate and valid power calculations are included that give confidence that a negative result can be relied upon.