| Literature DB >> 21340561 |
Abstract
Multilevel anatomic obstruction is often present in snoring and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). As the nose is the first anatomical boundary of the upper airway, nasal obstruction may contribute to sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). A number of pathophysiological mechanisms can potentially explain the role of nasal pathology in SDB. These include the Starling resistor model, the unstable oral airway, the nasal ventilatory reflex and the role of nitric oxide (NO). Clinically, a number of case-control studies have shown that nasal obstruction is associated with snoring and mild SDB. However, there is not a linear correlation between the degree of nasal obstruction and the severity of SDB, while nasal obstruction is not the main contributing factor in the majority of patients with moderate to severe OSA. Randomised controlled studies have shown that in patients with allergic rhinitis or non-allergic rhinitis and sleep disturbance, nasal steroids could improve the subjective quality of sleep, and may be useful for patients with mild OSA, however, they are not by themselves an adequate treatment for most OSA patients. Similarly, nasal surgery may improve quality of life and snoring in a subgroup of patients with mild SDB and septal deviation, but it is not an effective treatment for OSA as such. On the other hand, in patients who do not tolerate continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) well, if upper airway evaluation demonstrates an obstructive nasal passage, nasal airway surgery can improve CPAP compliance and adherence.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21340561 PMCID: PMC3149667 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-010-1469-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Pathophysiology of nasal function in the pathogenesis of OSA
| a. Starling resistor model | Elevated nasal resistance upstream results in increased negative pressure (suction force) in oropharyngeal airway downstream |
| b. Unstable oral breathing | Significantly increased nasal airway resistance results in compensatory increase of oral breathing fraction and switching to breathing through an unstable oral airway, resulting in increased total airway resistance |
| c. Nasal-ventilatory reflex | Decreased nasal airflow results in decreased activation of nasal receptors with subsequent inhibitory action on muscle tone, breathing frequency and minute lung ventilation |
| d. Nitric oxide | Decreased nasal flow results to reduced lung NO with resultant potential perfusion ventilation mismatch as well as various effects on oropharyngeal musculature and arousals |
Fig. 1The Starling resistor model of upper airway collapsibility. The upper airway behaves like a Starling resistor in that obstruction at the inlet (i.e. the nasal airway) produces collapsing forces that are manifest downstream in the collapsible segment, the pharynx
Randomised controlled studies assessing nasal pharmacological interventions for sleep disturbance
| References | Study design | Patients | Nasal pathology | Intervention | Objective outcomes | Subjective outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kiely et al. [ | Double blind crossover RCT | 10 simple snorers (mean AHI:3), 13 OSA patients (mean AHI: 26.5) | PAR or SAR, no septal deviation | Fluticasone 100 mcg bd for 4 weeks | Median AHI reduced in OSA patients taking fluticasone from 30.3 to 23.0 ( | Improvement daytime alertness for non-apnoeic patients, not for OSA patients | No patient with OSA was cured |
| Craig et al. [ | Pooled results from three double blind randomised crossover trials | 42 patients with self-reported daytime somnolence and impaired sleep—OSA patients excluded | Subjective nasal obstruction and SPT proven NAR | Nasal steroids od (fluticasone 200 mcg, budesonide 128 mcg, flunisonide 200 mcg) for 3 weeks | Mesured only in fluticasone group: no polysomnographic changes in AHI or other sleep parameters | Decreased sleep problems (1.25 vs. 1.69; | Significant correlation between changes in nasal congestion and overall sleep improvement |
| McLean et al. [ | Double blind crossover study | Ten OSA patients | Clinician assessed nasal obstruction | Topical xylometazoline (0.2 mg twice) and external dilator strip for one night | AHI reduced by 12, improved sleep architecture | No improvement in daytime sleepiness | No correlation between change in nasal resitance and AHI change. Only one patient had AHI < 15 after treatment |
| Kerr et al. [ | Double blind crossover study | 10 OSA patients | Six had clinician and patient assessed nasal obstruction | Topical xylometazoline before sleep and internal nasal dilator for one night | No change in AHI, slightly reduced arousal episodes | Subjective improvement in sleep quality | |
| Clarenbach et al. [ | Double blind crossover study | 12 OSA patients | Subjective nasal obstruction | Topical xylometazoline 0.15 mg od before sleep for 1 week | No change in AHI | No improvement in sleep quality | Significant decrease in AHI at the time of maximal decongestion |