Prognostic impact of sleep duration and sleep efficiency on mortality in patients with chronic heart failure

2013 
Abstract Background Both short and long self-reported sleep duration (SD SR ) has been linked to increased mortality. Our analysis tested the hypothesis that long SD SR is paralleled by impaired objective sleep efficiency (SE PSG ) measured by polysomnography (PSG) and that impaired SE PSG is a risk factor for death in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). Methods SD SR and SE PSG were assessed by standardized questionnaire and PSG in 188 consecutive CHF patients (age range, 63±10year; left ventricular ejection fraction, 34±10%) admitted to the Sleep Center of the University Hospital Regensburg between 1/2002 and 12/2009. The mean follow-up period was 44±26months. Results SE PSG in CHF patients from the highest quintile of SD SR (⩾9h) was significantly lower compared with the middle quintile (7.25–8h; 71±15% vs 77%±11%; p =0.032) and similar to the lowest quintile (⩽5.75h; 71±15% vs 71±16%, p =0.950). SE PSG is an independent predictor for death in the multivariable model after accounting for the significant confounders age, left ventricular ejection fraction, cause of CHF, and NYHA class (hazard ratio [HR] per 5% increase, 0.85; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.77–0.93; p Conclusions Data indicate that subjective long sleepers with CHF have poor sleep efficiency. Objectively measured SE PSG strongly predicts mortality in CHF patients, underscoring the importance of objective assessment of sleep.
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