DOI: 10.1161/atvbaha.125.324076 ISSN: 1079-5642

Sleep, Neural Circulatory Control, and Cardiovascular Disease: A Mechanistic Review

Shahid Karim, Saifullah Khan, Virend K. Somers

Sleep is an active period of profound autonomic fluctuation, cycling between the parasympathetic dominance of nonrapid eye movement sleep and the sympathetic/parasympathetic volatility of rapid eye movement sleep. Sleep-disordered breathing, a spectrum of disorders marked by recurrent ventilatory instability and intermittent hypoxia during sleep, particularly obstructive sleep apnea, pathologically amplifies this volatility, transforming sleep into a nightly cascade of severe autonomic and hemodynamic stress. The cardinal features of sleep-disordered breathing, intermittent hypoxia, recurrent arousals, and marked intrathoracic pressure swings, act synergistically to drive chronic, 24-hour sympathetic overactivity, chemoreflex sensitization, and maladaptive neuroplasticity. These effects are mediated at a cellular level by oxidative stress, systemic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and neuroendocrine dysregulation. This persistent autonomic reset provides a direct mechanistic link to cardiovascular consequences. It is likely a primary driver of hypertension, blunting the nocturnal blood pressure dip and promoting sustained 24-hour sympathoexcitation. It fosters a proarrhythmic substrate for atrial fibrillation through mechanical stress, which drives atrial remodeling and autonomic conflict. Furthermore, sleep-disordered breathing contributes to myocardial ischemia by increasing myocardial oxygen demand and promoting a prothrombotic state. Beyond chronic disease, sleep-related autonomic shifts can act as acute triggers for malignant arrhythmias in individuals with vulnerable substrates, such as inherited channelopathies, a risk that may be significantly amplified by comorbid sleep-disordered breathing. This review delineates the critical neural and cellular pathways connecting sleep, autonomic dysregulation, and cardiovascular risk.

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