| Literature DB >> 26029694 |
José Haba-Rubio1, Nicolas Julien Petitpierre1, Françoise Cornette1, Nadia Tobback1, Sopharat Vat1, Theresia Giallourou2, Ahmed Al-Jumaily3, Raphael Heinzer1.
Abstract
Although continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the most effective therapy for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), it is not always well tolerated by the patients. Previous physiological studies showed that pressure oscillations applied to the pharynx could activate upper airway muscles, but it is not clear whether these pressure oscillations could be tolerated during sleep in OSA patients. The aim of this study was to assess the tolerance of oscillating positive airway pressure (O-PAP) (a CPAP device delivering high-frequency pressure oscillations to the upper airway) compared to CPAP. Fourteen OSA patients currently on CPAP [age 59.9 ± 10.1 years old, BMI 34.8 ± 7.2 kg/m(2), initial apnea-hypopnea index (AHI): 58.7 ± 25.2 events/h] used O-PAP or CPAP on two consecutive nights under polysomnography, in a single-blind randomized crossover design to assess sleep quality. A subtherapeutic pressure (70% of the optimal titrated pressure) was applied in both conditions and the residual AHI with each technique was also compared. There was no difference in measured or perceived sleep quality between the two treatment modalities (sleep efficiency 90.0% versus 88.1%, p = 0.54). Despite the small sample, we also found a trend toward a decrease in residual respiratory events with O-PAP compared to CPAP (median AHI 14.3 versus 20.5/h, p = 0.194). The good tolerance of O-PAP and the positive trend toward a reduction in residual AHI should stimulate further research on the effects of O-PAP in OSA patients.Entities:
Keywords: arousal; continuous positive airway pressure; obstructive sleep apnea; pharynx; vibration
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029694 PMCID: PMC4426761 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2015.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1The O-PAP setting. The pressure oscillation generator (a) and the CPAP (b) are connected to the patient’s mask through a “Y” tubing (c). Modified from Wikimedia Commons.
Figure 2Schematic drawing of O-PAP in a patient with fixed 8 cmH. PAW, airway pressure.
Patients’ characteristics.
| Mean | SD | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 59.9 | ±10.1 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 34.8 | ±7.2 |
| Sex M/F ( | 13/1 | |
| Neck circumference (cm) | 45.0 | ±4.4 |
| Initial AHI (events/h) | 58.7 | ±25.2 |
| CPAP use (years) | 4.1 | ±1.8 |
| CPAP pressure | 12.3 | ±2.9 |
| Type of mask (N/FF) | 6/8 | |
| aCPAP/CPAP, N | 12/2 |
.
N, nasal; FF, full face; aCPAP, autoadjusted CPAP.
Objective and subjective sleep quality parameters and residual AHI with O-PAP and CPAP under a pressure corresponding to 70% of the optimal CPAP pressure.
| CPAP | O-PAP | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Arousal index (/h) | 32.5 [23.7–44.4] | 28.1 [22.5–34.7] | 0.296 |
| Respiratory arousals index (/h) | 16.2 [11.0–21.2] | 11.5 [5.4–20.8] | 0.104 |
| Sleep time | 356.6 [232.8–390.2] | 336.6 [234.5–361.0] | 0.325 |
| Sleep efficiency (%) | 90.0 [78.0–92.5] | 88.1 [71.9–92.6] | 0.542 |
| Sleep quality VAS (mm) | 78.8 [60.6–85.7] | 75.5 [57.4–85.4] | 0.695 |
| AHI (/h) | 20.5 [13.7–28.9] | 14.3 [8.5–25.8] | 0.194 |
| AHI supine (/h) | 36.9 [24.0–58.4] | 23.6 [11.5–66.8] | 0.432 |
| AHI non-supine (/h) | 11.7 [4.5–16.9] | 12.3 [4.4–21.9] | 0.966 |
| AHI in REM sleep (/h) | 7.9 [5.2–13.6] | 12.6 [9.1–26.7] | 0.426 |
| AHI in NREM sleep (/h) | 22.4 [13.7–30.9] | 13.2 [8.2–22.2] | 0.104 |
| ODI ≥3% (/h) | 16.2 [9.9–35.6] | 12.7 [9.4–22.1] | 0.583 |
.
REM, rapid eye movement sleep; NREM, non-rapid eye movement sleep; VAS, visual analog scale.
Maximum score 100 mm. Higher score indicates better sleep quality.
Results are expressed as median and interquartile range.