| Literature DB >> 25335642 |
Marijke Dieltjens1, Anneclaire V Vroegop, Annelies E Verbruggen, Kristien Wouters, Marc Willemen, Wilfried A De Backer, Johan A Verbraecken, Paul H Van de Heyning, Marc J Braem, Nico de Vries, Olivier M Vanderveken.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The objective of this randomized controlled trial was to assess the additional effect of a chest-worn sleep position trainer (SPT) in patients with residual supine-dependent obstructive sleep apnea (sdOSA) under mandibular advancement device (MAD) therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25335642 PMCID: PMC4873543 DOI: 10.1007/s11325-014-1068-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Breath ISSN: 1520-9512 Impact factor: 2.816
Fig. 1Flow chart of the study design
Fig. 2The sleep position trainer used in this study
Baseline characteristics of the study population
| Parameter | Mean ± SD |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 52.5 ± 10.5 |
| Gender | 57.9 % male |
| Body mass index, BMI (kg/m2) | 26.4 ± 3.0 |
| Overall apnea/hypopnea index, AHI (events/h) | 20.9 (17.0; 34.0) |
| Supine AHI (events/h) | 39.1 (26.4; 58.2) |
| Non-supine AHI (events/h) | 11.1 (6.3; 26.1) |
Data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD), percentages or median (Q1; Q3)
Fig. 3Percentages of total sleep time spent (TST) in the supine position for the different study nights
Polysomnographic results of the different study nights
| Parameter | Baseline | With MAD | With SPT | With SPT + MAD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall AHI (events/h) | 20.9 (17.0; 34.0) | 11.0 (6.6; 14.0)* | 12.8 (3.9; 17.9)* | 5.5 (3.4; 7.2)*,$, |
| Supine AHI (events/h) | 39.1 (26.4; 58.2) | 21.8 (14.8; 29.5)* | 0.0 (0.0; 11.5)*,$ | 0.0 (0.0; 22.7)* |
| Non-supine AHI (events/h) | 11.1 (6.3; 26.1) | 3.9 (2.0; 5.0)* | 12.8 (3.8; 17.2)$ | 4.8 (2.0; 6.0)*,∞ |
| ODI (events/h) | 7.7 (6.6; 16.5) | 3.8 (1.2; 5.5)* | 2.6 (1.0; 4.6)* | 1.8 (1.0; 3.0)*,$ |
| Mean SaO2 (%) | 94.9 (93.6; 95.8) | 94.8 (93.8; 96.2) | 95.3 (94.0; 96.2) | 95.4 (94.1; 96.9) |
| Min SaO2 (%) | 84.7 (79.0; 86.0) | 87.0 (84.0; 91.0) | 88.0 (84.0; 90.0)* | 89.0 (87.0; 91.0)* |
| TST (min) | 394.5 (361.2; 420.6) | 419.0 (407.0; 452.5) | 405.5 (386.5; 438.2) | 413.0 (385.0; 444.2) |
| Sleep efficiency (%) | 85.1 (79.4; 87.2) | 87.5 (82.4; 92.6) | 84.6 (80.6; 87.9) | 84.2 (79.0; 89.7) |
| Stage N1 (% TST) | 5.8 (3.4; 6.7) | 3.9 (3.2; 5.6) | 4.4 (3.3; 6.2) | 4.1 (3.1; 4.9) |
| Stage N2 (% TST) | 51.4 (38.7; 54.6) | 47.9 (43.5; 51.0) | 48.7 (48.0; 51.2) | 46.6 (39.0; 50.2) |
| Stage N3 (% TST) | 11.9 (5.9; 18.9) | 20.0 (15.3; 22.8)* | 15.2 (12.3; 18.9) | 17.6 (11.4; 22.7) |
| Stage REM (% TST) | 17.3 (13.7; 21.3) | 21.2 (15.3; 26.2) | 20.5 (15.6; 26.1) | 20.5 (19.1; 27.7) |
| Arousal index (events/h) | 10.1 (6.6; 15.0) | 9.2 (7.3; 14.7) | 19.5 (11.2; 24.3)$ | 11.7 (6.7; 13.6)∞ |
| Percentage of respiratory arousals (%) | 35.4 (24.8; 59.4) | 17.1 (7.0; 32.0)* | 19.6 (4.7; 32.3)* | 8.0 (2.9; 12.9)*,$ |
| Number of awakenings | 22.0 (13.0; 29.0) | 17.0 (13.3; 21.5) | 21.5 (14.5; 30.0) | 18.0 (13.3; 24.8) |
| Percentage of TST in supine position (%) | 31.9 (15.4; 52.4) | 49.5 (32.6; 48.9) | 0.0 (0.0; 1.1)*,$ | 0.0 (0.0; 1.0)*,$ |
| Positional change index (changes/h) | 2.0 (1.6; 2.8) | 1.7 (1.2; 2.4) | 2.2 (1.6; 3.0) | 2.4 (1.7; 3.4) |
Data are presented as median (Q1, Q3)
AHI apnea/hypopnea index, ODI oxygen desaturation index, TST total sleep time, REM rapid eye movement
*Statistically significant (p < 0.008) as compared to baseline
$Statistically significant (p < 0.008) as compared to PSG with MAD
∞Statistically significant (p < 0.008) as compared to PSG with SPT
Fig. 4Overall apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) for the different conditions tested. The different gray scales represent the varying levels of sleep apnea severity, ranging from normal nocturnal breathing (AHI <5/h sleep), mild OSA (AHI 5–15/h), moderate OSA (AHI 15–30/h), to severe OSA (AHI >30/h). Left panel: Box plots for the four different study nights. The 75th and 25th percentiles are represented by the upper and lower margins, the mean values by the closed dots, and the median values by the horizontal line. Whiskers represent the maximum value (top) and the minimum value (bottom) of the dataset. Outliers are represented by an open dot. Right panel: The individual patient data for the different study nights are plotted in line graphs