Case–control study of heart rate variability and sleep apnea in childhood sickle cell disease

Author:

Bokov Plamen1ORCID,Koehl Bérengère23,Dudoignon Benjamin1,Benkerrou Malika45,Delclaux Christophe1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. AP‐HP, Robert Debré Hospital, Department of Physiology, INSERM NeuroDiderot Paris University Paris France

2. AP‐HP, Robert Debré Hospital, Sickle Cell Disease Center, Hematology Unit Paris University Paris France

3. UMR_S1134, BIGR, INSERM, Institut National de la Transfusion Sanguine, Laboratoire d'Excellence GR‐Ex Paris France

4. Sickle Cell Disease Center, Hematology Unit Robert Debré Hospital Paris France

5. INSERM UMR 1123, ECEVE Paris France

Abstract

SummaryObstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common in sickle cell disease (SCD) despite the absence of overweight, suggesting a specific pathophysiology. We previously showed that otherwise healthy children with increased pharyngeal compliance, a main endotype of OSA, exhibited decreased sympathetic modulation. Our objective was to assess whether modifications of heart rate variability (HRV) and compliance are associated in SCD. Cases (children with SCD, African or Caribbean ethnicity) and controls (otherwise healthy children, same ethnicity), aged 4–18 years, were selected from our database of children referred for OSA and matched for sex, age, and obstructive apnea–hypopnoea index (OAHI) score. The children underwent polysomnography and acoustic pharyngometry (to compute compliance). HRV analyses were performed from 5 min ECG recordings in wakeful, NREM, and REM sleep states and from the whole night. Twenty‐one pairs were analysed (median age 10.5 years, 24 girls). Children with SCD had lower BMI z‐scores and more tonsil hypertrophy than control children. Children with SCD and OSA (OAHI ≥2/hour) were characterised by lower compliance than children with SCD without OSA. An inverse relationship between compliance and SD2 (HRV from whole night, inversely related to sympathetic modulation) was evidenced (negative relationship in SCD: R = −0.63, p = 0.002 vs. positive relationship in controls R = 0.59, p = 0.006). In conclusion, while the decrease in sympathetic modulation in control children may contribute to increasing pharyngeal compliance, its decrease seems protective in children with sickle cell disease, which underlines the specificity of OSAS pathophysiology in SCD that could be due to sickle cell disease related smooth muscle dystonia.

Publisher

Wiley

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