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Night Cardiac Arrests: Silent Killer Strikes During Sleep
12 Jan
Summary
- Nighttime cardiac arrest is common, affecting apparently healthy individuals.
- Sleep apnea and hormonal shifts can trigger fatal heart events at night.
- Lifestyle factors like stress and co-morbidities increase risk by age 40.

Sudden cardiac arrests during sleep, once rare, are becoming a concerning phenomenon, even affecting individuals who appear healthy. These events often occur because of underlying, undiagnosed heart conditions that are exacerbated during the body's natural parasympathetic response at night. Changes in heart rate and rhythm during sleep can lead to dangerous arrhythmias, increasing the risk significantly between midnight and early morning.
Several factors contribute to this alarming trend. Sleep apnea, characterized by intermittent breathing cessation, causes oxygen levels to drop, stressing the heart and destabilizing its rhythm. Furthermore, hormonal shifts in the early morning hours can increase blood pressure and heart rate, potentially causing unstable plaques to rupture. This rupture can lead to blood clots that block coronary arteries, cutting off oxygen and triggering fatal arrhythmias while the individual remains unaware in deep sleep.




