Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : This study tested the concept that changes in breathing parameters account for modifications in respiratory-related blood pressure (BP) and R-R interval (RRI) variability during nocturnal sleep. BP (Finapres), electrocardiogram, respiration (Respitrace), and polygraphic sleep recordings were recorded continuously in 13 healthy men aged 18-37 yr. The transfer characteristics identified by coherence and gain measures between the calibrated thoraco-abdominal motion and the respiratory-related BP and RRI variability evidenced a consistent increase during transitions from wake to light sleep and from light to deep sleep but returned to waking levels during rapid-eye-movement sleep (P < 0.0001). These changes were related to the specific modifications occurring in the respiratory rate, tidal volume, and ribcage-to-abdominal motion ratio during the different sleep stages (0.28 < r < 0.39; P < 0.0001). This study demonstrates 1) that modifications in the breathing pattern account for 8-15% of the variance in the cardiorespiratory transfer, and 2) that respiratory modulation of vagal activity is not the main mechanism controlling the magnitude of the respiratory-related BP and RRI variability during sleep.