Acute Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Acute Myocardial Infarction and the Role of CPAP Treatment: a Double -Blind, Randomized Control Trial
Specific Aim
1. To determine the prevalence of OSA in patients of first-time AMI in acute phase By
screening patients of first-time, single-vessel disease, Killip I AMI, and successful
revascularization
2. To determine the impact of CPAP treatment on the prognosis of AMI Using sham CPAP as
the optimal placebo, we conduct this randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial
to assess the 12-week CPAP effect in moderate-severe OSA patients.
3. To determine how the OSA affects patients with MI in acute and chronic phase and vice
versa, which is dissected from mechanical basis and molecular basis By comparing the
clinical parameters of AMI patients without OSA (AHI<5/hr), mild OSA (5 < AHI <15),
moderate OSA (15<AHI<30) and severe OSA5 (AHI>30/hr), and before and after CPAP
treatment, we can determine the interaction between OSA and AMI.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a major public health problem affecting at least 2-4% of
middle-aged population. OSA resulted in hypoxia and sleep fragmentation, which resulted in
neurocognitive dysfunction and cardiovascular sequelaes. The cardiovascular sequelaes in OSA
included hypertension, coronary artery disease and heart failure. Our data showed among 599
moderate-sever OSA (AHI<15/hr), 44.5% patients had cardiovascular disease, which included
41.4% having hypertension,7% having CAD and 2.4% having congestive heart failure。 Though OSA
is well known to be highly correlated with fatal and non-fatal cardiac event, only limited
studies investigated how OSA affected acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Most studies
concluded that AMI would worsen OSA and vice versa. However, how AMI exactly interacts with
OSA and what the prevalence of OSA in the first-time AMI is have never been answered. Within
four weeks from Nov. 15th 2007, we screened ten patients of first-time AMI with
single-vessel disease and Killip I. Five in 10 received PSG and three in five have moderate
OSA.
So far, CPAP is the standard treatment for patients with moderate to severe OSA. CPAP could
improve airway patency, daytime sleepiness, functional status, blood pressure, metabolic
abnormalities and quality of life. In our study, we enrolled 24 non-sleepy OSA and 30 sleepy
OSA to study the four-week CPAP effect. The results showed the apnea-hypopnea index,
hypoxia, arousal, sleepiness and fatigue could be corrected with CPAP treatment in both
groups. However, CPAP could only lower risk factors for cardiovascular disease, like blood
pressure, epinephrine, norepinephrine and CRP, in sleepy OSA. Our finding supported that
CPAP effect was not similar in the subgroups of severe OSA, so CPAP effect should be studied
in every subgroup of OSA patients before it's applied. Till now, there's no literatures
reported if CPAP treatment would decrease the morbidity and mortality of AMI.
Sham CPAP mimicked all the characteristics of a true CPAP except for the null pressure,
which was recently used as the placebo to study CPAP effect. Therefore, using this optimized
placebo, we propose this double-blind, control randomized trial (1) To determine the
prevalence of OSA in patients of first-time AMI in acute phase; (2) To determine the impact
of CPAP treatment on the prognosis of AMI; (3) Determine how the OSA affects patients with
MI in acute and chronic phase and vice versa, which is dissected from mechanical basis and
molecular basis.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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