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Blood pressure effects of CPAP in nonresistant and resistant hypertension associated with OSA: A systematic review of randomized clinical trials
CPAP's effects on blood pressure in people with sleep apnea and easy-to-treat or hard-to-treat high blood pressure
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Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with increased prevalence of hypertension.
- Intermittent hypoxia during sleep may contribute to sympathetic overactivity, systemic inflammation, and oxidative stress.
- Supplemental oxygen therapy did not reduce blood pressure despite improving oxygen saturation.
- CPAP treatment could be more effective for patients with resistant hypertension compared to those with nonresistant hypertension.
- Sympathetic overactivity and altered vascular reactivity may be more pronounced in resistant hypertension in OSA patients.
- Variability in trial outcomes may relate to compliance, adherence, demographic factors, genetic influences, and comorbidities.
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