P. Escourrou et al., Sleep-related respiratory disorders in heart failure patients: prevalence,pathophysiology and treatment, REV MAL RES, 16(2), 1999, pp. 161-171
Cheyne-Stokes respiration occurs during sleep in 40-45% of patients with NY
HA class III and IV heart failure. Such patients experience repented episod
es of progressively diminishing ventilation associated with desaturation fo
llowed by periods of increasing-amplitude ventilation.
The mechanism appears to be related to hyperventilation leading to hypocapn
ia which occurs near a critical threshold of apnea during sleep stages I an
d stage II and interrupts central ventilatory control. The total duration o
f the periodic respiration cycle would depend on the increased circulation
time subsequent to lowered cardic output.
Brief periods of waking provoked by Cheyne-Stokes respiration, accentuating
sympathetic nervous system activity, are an unfavorable prognostic factor
in heart failure. Activation of the sympathetic system may be corrected by,
CPAP although the long-term effect on heart failure remains controversial.
Other treatments, such as oxygen therapy or theophylline, co,combined with
optimized treatment of heart failure, have been proposed.