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Patients with end-stage renal disease face a particularly high risk of cardiovascular disease and total mortality. Part of their increased risk is due to higher prevalence of established risk factors such as arterial hypertension, diabetes, smoking and anemia. Hypertension and diabetes have a very high prevalence in dialysis patients and play a major role in their high mortality and morbidity. Hyperparathyroidism, hyperhomocis-teinemia and disordered lipid metabolism represent factors which are peculiarly altered by the uremic state. Inflammatory processes, high sympathetic activity and the accumulation of an endogenous inhibitor of NO synthase (ADMA) have recently emerged as cardiovascular risk factors of paramount importance. Sleep apnea has been linked with nocturnal hypertension and could be implicated in the high prevalence of concentric hypertrophy of the left ventricle in these patients. Hypertension control as well as appropriate treatment of anaemia and cessation of smoking constitute fundamental areas of intervention in dialysis patients. It is possible that in the near future control of chronic inflammatory processes, of high sympathetic activity and endothelial dysfunction will further contribute to curb the exceedingly high cardiovascular mortality of patients on chronic dialysis treatment.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular events in chronic advanced renal insufficiency. Current concepts]. 1267 80

Rapidly accumulating evidence shows that sleep apnea is a major factor influencing personal health and public safety. Diagnosis and treatment of this syndrome may well result in significant preventive medicine outcomes. The prevalence of sleep apnea is so high that evaluation and treatment must become the province of the primary care physician. Accurate, appropriate history, physical assessment and clinical management are the mainstays of care, with the judicial application of technology. A history of snoring, particularly when it is intermittent, interrupted by snorts, and accompanied by restless sleep or daytime sleepiness suggests the need for further evaluation. When co-morbid conditions such as hypertension, cardiovascular disease or type 2 diabetes are present, formal evaluation and consideration of treatment are needed. If initial evaluation reveals severe obstructive sleep apnea with observed apneas, together with excessive daytime sleepiness, clinical management with empirical application of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) may suffice in experienced hands.
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PMID:Diagnosis of sleep apnea. 1267 67

The obesity epidemic is driving metabolic (insulin resistance) syndrome-related health problems including an approximately threefold increased coronary heart disease risk. Sympathetic hyperfunction may participate in the pathogenesis and complications of the metabolic syndrome including higher blood pressure, a more active renin-angiotensin system, insulin resistance, faster heart rates, and excess cardiovascular disease including sudden death. Possible factors augmenting sympathetic activation in the metabolic syndrome include alterations of insulin, leptin, nonesterified fatty acids (NEFAs), cytokines, tri-iodothyronine, eicosanoids, sleep apnea, nitric oxide, endorphins, and neuropeptide Y. Of note, high plasma NEFAs are a risk factor for hypertension and sudden death. In short-term human studies, NEFAs can raise blood pressure, heart rate, and a(1)-adrenoceptor vasoreactivity, while reducing baroreflex sensitivity, endothelium-dependent vasodilatation, and vascular compliance. Efforts to further identify the mechanisms and consequences of sympathetic dysfunction in the metabolic syndrome may provide insights for therapeutic advances to ameliorate the excess cardiovascular risk and adverse outcomes.
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PMID:Insulin resistance and the sympathetic nervous system. 1272 58

Patients with end-stage renal disease face a particularly high risk of cardiovascular disease and total mortality. Part of their increased risk is due to a higher prevalence of established risk factors, such as arterial hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and anemia. Hypertension and diabetes have a very high prevalence in dialysis patients and play a major role in their high mortality and morbidity. Hyperparathyroidism, hyperhomocysteinemia and disordered lipid metabolism represent factors that are peculiarly altered by the uremic state. Inflammatory processes, high sympathetic activity, and the accumulation of an endogenous inhibitor of NO synthase (ADMA), have recently emerged as cardiovascular risk factors of paramount importance. Sleep apnea has been linked with nocturnal hypertension and could be implicated in the high prevalence of concentric hypertrophy of the left ventricle in these patients. Hypertension control, as well as appropriate treatment of anemia and cessation of smoking, constitutes a fundamental area of intervention in dialysis patients. It appears possible that, in the near future, control of chronic inflammatory processes of high sympathetic activity and endothelial dysfunction will further help to curb the exceedingly high cardiovascular mortality of patients on chronic dialysis treatment.
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PMID:Traditional and emerging cardiovascular risk factors in end-stage renal disease. 1275 78

Sleep apnea is associated with several cardiovascular disease conditions. A causal relationship between sleep apnea and each of these diseases is likely, but remains to be proven. The clearest evidence implicating OSA in the development of new cardiovascular disease involves data that show an increased prevalence of new hypertension in patients with OSA followed over 4 years [3]. Circumstantial evidence and data from small study samples suggest that OSA, in the setting of existing cardiovascular disease, may exacerbate symptoms and accelerate disease progression. The diagnosis of OSA always should be considered in patients with refractory heart failure, resistant hypertension, nocturnal cardiac ischemia, and nocturnal arrhythmias, especially in individuals with risk factors for sleep apnea (e.g., central obesity, age, and male gender). Treating sleep apnea may help to achieve better clinical control in these diseases and may improve long-term cardiovascular prognosis.
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PMID:Cardiovascular consequences of obstructive sleep apnea. 1280 Jul 78

Obesity is approaching epidemic proportions in the western industrialized world, and is also becoming a major problem among young people in eastern and developing countries. Unfortunately, excess fat or adipose tissue is associated with a wide array of health problems, including increased incidence of type II diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, sleep apnea, and skeletomuscular problems. Obesity is the second leading cause of death from "unnecessary" causes in the U.S. (after smoking), and costs individuals and society billions of dollars worldwide to treat. Despite common wisdom that "one just needs to eat less and exercise more" and a multi-billion-dollar diet industry, epidemiological data indicate that the incidence of obesity will continue to rise. This alarming trend is, in part, due to the unprecedented availability of energy-dense foods and an increasingly sedentary lifestyle. These environmental factors may be complicated in some individuals by an unfavorable genetic predisposition. Pharmaceutical companies lead active research programs to identify drugs that target weight control centers in the body and which may help individuals control their weight; however, no satisfactory magic bullet to fight obesity has yet come through the pipeline.
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PMID:Signaling pathway puts the break on fat cell formation. 1280 64

Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a very prevalent disorder particularly amongst middle-aged, obese men, although its existence in women as well as in lean individuals is increasingly recognized. Despite the early recognition of the strong association between OSA and obesity, and OSA and cardiovascular problems, sleep apnoea has been treated as a 'local abnormality' of the respiratory track rather than as a 'systemic illness'. In 1997, we first reported that the pro-inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) were elevated in patients with disorders of excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) and proposed that these cytokines were mediators of daytime sleepiness. Also, we reported a positive correlation between IL-6 or TNF alpha plasma levels and the body mass index (BMI). In subsequent studies, we showed that IL-6, TNF alpha, leptin and insulin levels were elevated in sleep apnoea independently of obesity and that visceral fat, was the primary parameter linked with sleep apnoea. The association of OSA with insulin resistance and diabetes type 2 has been confirmed since then in several epidemiological and clinical studies. Furthermore, our findings that women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS, a condition associated with hyperandrogenism and insulin resistance) were much more likely than controls to have sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and daytime sleepiness support the pathogenetic role of insulin resistance in OSA. Other findings that support the view that sleep apnoea and sleepiness may be manifestations of a serious metabolic disorder, namely the Metabolic or Visceral Obesity Syndrome, include: obesity without sleep apnoea is associated with daytime sleepiness; PCOS and diabetes type 2 are independently associated with EDS after controlling for SDB, obesity and age; and increased prevalence of sleep apnoea in postmenopausal women, with hormonal replacement therapy associated with a significantly reduced risk for OSA. In conclusion, accumulating evidence provides support to our model of the bi-directional, feedforward, pernicious association between sleep apnoea, sleepiness, inflammation and insulin resistance, all promoting atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Metabolic disturbances in obesity versus sleep apnoea: the importance of visceral obesity and insulin resistance. 1282 41

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a disorder characterized by repetitive episodes of apnea or hypopnea during sleep. Apnea and hypopnea cause temporary elevations in blood pressure associated with blood oxygen desaturation, arousal, and sympathetic activation and may cause elevated blood pressure during the daytime. Numerous studies have shown that OSAS was associated with an increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. In this review, we describe the normal hemodynamic changes that occur during sleep, the acute hemodynamic events associated with OSAS and finally we summarize the evidence for causal connection between sleep apnea and cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:[Obstructive sleep apnea and cardiovascular diseases]. 1282 11

Obesity is a progressive disease of unwanted fat accumulation which has multiple, organ-specific pathological consequences. The manifestations of obesity occur within virtually every subspecialty of medicine or surgery and they interact importantly to accelerate the ageing process in many organs. Many of the hazards of obesity have multiple causes (e.g., diabetes, heart disease, stroke, colonic and breast cancer, urinary incontinence, tiredness, back pain, breathlessness). All of these conditions become more prevalent with age and are also more prevalent among overweight persons, particularly those with a central fat distribution marked by a high waist circumference. Hypertension may be caused or aggravated by weight gain. It is mediated by the physical demands of an expanded circulating volume and increased metabolic rate by metabolic mechanisms related to central fat distribution and the "metabolic syndrome", and to increased sodium consumption by overweight people (because they need more food to maintain a higher metabolic rate). Since body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference increase significantly with age there is an escalation of the burden of ill health from obesity with age. The best simple indicator of disease risk with obesity is the waist circumference since this identifies people who have a high body fat content and also those who have an increased intraabdominal accumulation of fat. The quantitative burden of ill health from overweight and obesity varies within different specialties, but up to 80% of type 2 diabetes or polycystic ovarian syndrome can be attributed to obesity. Obesity is the cause of sleep apnea syndrome in around 50% of cases and heart disease in perhaps 10-20% of cases. In Scotland 80% of people with existing cardiovascular disease are overweight compared with 57% of the general population. The financial burden to health services from overweight and obesity has been incompletely assessed, although it is estimated that around 4% of total health care budgets are attributable to people having BMI > 25 kg/m(2). This is similar to the entire cost of diabetes, epilepsy or major cancers. Obesity is therefore an extremely expensive disease based on these conservative estimates from limited evaluations. More general assessments show how obesity increases the amount of time taken off work, the number of drugs prescribed and the expenditure from social services support. Thus, obesity represents a huge burden not only on the individual patient physically, psychologically, socially and financially but also on families and careers and is a huge drain on health care resources. Overweight affects well over half of all adults worldwide, progressing to BMI > 30 kg/m(2) in around 20% outside subsistence rural communities. Its rapidly increasing prevalence now described as an epidemic demands major preventive measures, as well as better medical treatment for individuals affected.
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PMID:Obesity: burdens of illness and strategies for prevention or management. 1284 36

Sleep-disordered breathing, namely obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and central sleep apnea (CSA), are both often encountered in the setting of heart failure (HF), and have distinct differences in terms of prevalence, pathophysiology and consequences. OSA is independently associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular disease and for congestive HF in the general population. It is conceivable that this breathing disorder may have particularly deleterious effects in patients with coexisting heart disease, especially in those with a failing heart. There are considerable data addressing the interaction between OSA and the cardiovascular system, which underscore the importance of an early detection of this breathing disorder, especially in patients with HF. CSA is generally considered a consequence rather than a cause of HF, and is correlated with the severity of hemodynamic impairment. However, when present, it is associated with increased arrhythmic risk and higher cardiac mortality. Potential mechanisms implicated in the genesis of this breathing pattern and the possible therapeutic options, which have been proven to be effective in the clinical setting, are discussed.
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PMID:Sleep-disordered breathing in heart failure: characteristics and implications. 1285 7


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