Exploring the Relationship Between Sleep Apnea, Myocardial Infarct Size, and Coronary Collaterals in Acute Myocardial Infarction: A Multidisciplinary Study
mi
Psychiatry
Neurophysiology and neuropsychology
myocardial infarction
ischemic preconditioning
QP351-495
cardiac mri
rentrop
RC435-571
infarct
sleep apnea
Original Research
DOI:
10.2147/nss.s489788
Publication Date:
2025-01-09T02:30:13Z
AUTHORS (16)
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: We designed a study investigating the cardioprotective role of sleep apnea (SA) in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), focusing on its association with infarct size and coronary collateral circulation. METHODS: We recruited adults with AMI, who underwent Level-III SA testing during hospitalization. Delayed-enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging was performed to quantify AMI size (percent-infarcted myocardium). Rentrop Score quantified coronary collateralization (scores 0–3, higher scores indicating augmented collaterals). Group differences in Rentrop grade and infarct size were compared using the Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test and Fisher’s Exact test as appropriate, with a significance threshold set at p <0.05. RESULTS: Among 33 adults, mean age was 54.4±11.5 and mean BMI was 28.4±5.9. 8 patients (24%) had no SA, and 25 (76%) had SA (mild n=10, moderate n=8, severe n=7). 66% (n=22) underwent CMR, and all patients had Rentrop scores. Median infarct size in the no-SA group was 22% versus 28% in the SA group (p=0.79). While we did not find statistically significant differences, moderate SA had a trend toward a smaller infarct size (median 15.5%; IQR 9.23) compared to the other groups (no SA [22.0%; 16.8,31.8], mild SA [27%; 23.8,32.5], and severe SA [34%; 31.53], p=0.12). A higher proportion of moderate SA patients had a Rentrop grade >0, with a trend toward significance (moderate SA versus other groups: 62.5% versus 28%, p=0.08). CONCLUSION: Our study did not find statistically significant differences in cardiac infarct size and the presence of coronary collaterals by sleep apnea severity among patients with AMI. However, our results are hypothesis-generating, and suggest that moderate SA may potentially offer cardioprotective benefits through enhanced coronary collaterals. These insights call for future research to explore the heterogeneity in ischemic preconditioning by SA severity and hypoxic burden to guide tailored clinical strategies for SA management in patients with AMI.
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