OBJECTIVE: To determine whether sleepiness and its evolution over sustained wakefulness could be reversed by nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy in patients with obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS). METHODS: Twelve OSAHS patients underwent three 32-h sessions of study: one before CPAP therapy (T0), the second (T3) and the third (T6), respectively, after 3 and 6 months of therapy. Each session included one night of sleep followed by 24 h of sustained wakefulness, during which EEG recordings and subjective ratings were performed every hour. RESULTS: The waking EEG in treated OSAHS patients was partially improved after 3 months of CPAP and their subjective complaint of sleepiness was normalized after 6 months. Theta power (3.9-7.8 Hz) was decreased as well as its time course during the diurnal period but beta power (12.7-29.2 Hz) remained higher. CONCLUSIONS: CPAP partially reverses waking EEG abnormalities in OSAHS patients with reduced theta activity after 3 months and removes the subjective complaint of sleepiness after 6 months. Nevertheless, the persistence of increased beta activity in treated patients suggests that efforts to stay awake remain strong after CPAP treatment. SIGNIFICANCE: CPAP influences the EEG's time course over sustained wakefulness in a frequency-specific manner in OSAHS patients.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether sleepiness and its evolution over sustained wakefulness could be reversed by nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy in patients with obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS). METHODS: Twelve OSAHSpatients underwent three 32-h sessions of study: one before CPAP therapy (T0), the second (T3) and the third (T6), respectively, after 3 and 6 months of therapy. Each session included one night of sleep followed by 24 h of sustained wakefulness, during which EEG recordings and subjective ratings were performed every hour. RESULTS: The waking EEG in treated OSAHSpatients was partially improved after 3 months of CPAP and their subjective complaint of sleepiness was normalized after 6 months. Theta power (3.9-7.8 Hz) was decreased as well as its time course during the diurnal period but beta power (12.7-29.2 Hz) remained higher. CONCLUSIONS: CPAP partially reverses waking EEG abnormalities in OSAHSpatients with reduced theta activity after 3 months and removes the subjective complaint of sleepiness after 6 months. Nevertheless, the persistence of increased beta activity in treated patients suggests that efforts to stay awake remain strong after CPAP treatment. SIGNIFICANCE: CPAP influences the EEG's time course over sustained wakefulness in a frequency-specific manner in OSAHSpatients.
Authors: Anna E Mullins; Korey Kam; Ankit Parekh; Omonigho M Bubu; Ricardo S Osorio; Andrew W Varga Journal: Neurobiol Dis Date: 2020-08-27 Impact factor: 5.996