Paper
Sleep and cardiovascular disease.
Published Dec 1, 2005 · R. Wolk, A. Gami, A. García-Touchard
Current problems in cardiology
Q1 SJR score
321
Citations
8
Influential Citations
Abstract
Abstract hidden due to publisher request; this does not indicate any issues with the research. Click the full text link above to read the abstract and view the original source.
Study Snapshot
Sleep plays a crucial role in cardiovascular function and may contribute to various diseases, such as hypertension, atherosclerosis, stroke, heart failure, and metabolic syndrome.
PopulationOlder adults (50-71 years)
Sample size24
MethodsObservational
OutcomesBody Mass Index projections
ResultsSocial networks mitigate obesity in older groups.
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References
Clinical trials update from the American College of Cardiology meeting: CARE‐HF and the Remission of Heart Failure, Women's Health Study, TNT, COMPASS‐HF, VERITAS, CANPAP, PEECH and PREMIER
Cardiac Re-synchronisation Therapy reduces mortality and cardiovascular hospitalization in patients with moderate or severe heart failure, while vitamin E and aspirin show no benefit in primary prevention of CV disease.
2005·55citations·J. Cleland et al.·European Journal of Heart Failure
European Journal of Heart Failure
Day-night pattern of sudden death in obstructive sleep apnea.
People with obstructive sleep apnea have a higher risk of sudden death from cardiac causes during sleeping hours, compared to the general population and those without obstructive sleep apnea.
2005·871citations·A. Gami et al.·The New England journal of medicine
The New England journal of medicine
Overdrive atrial pacing does not improve obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome
Overdrive atrial pacing does not significantly improve obstructive sleep apnoea severity in patients with permanent atrial-synchronous ventricular pacemakers.
2005·98citations·J. Pépin et al.·European Respiratory Journal
European Respiratory Journal
Antioxidant defense responses to sleep loss and sleep recovery.
Sleep deprivation leads to decreased antioxidant levels in the liver, leading to impaired health, and recovery sleep restores antioxidant balance and enhances antioxidant activities in the liver and heart.
2005·181citations·C. Everson et al.·American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
Overweight and obese patients in a primary care population report less sleep than patients with a normal body mass index.
Reduced sleep is associated with overweight and obesity, with a linear relationship from normal to obese BMI.
2005·432citations·R. Vorona et al.·Archives of internal medicine
Archives of internal medicine
Citations
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