Sleep, Neural Circulatory Control, and Cardiovascular Disease: A Mechanistic Review
Shahid Karim, Saifullah Khan, Virend K. SomersSleep 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.