| Literature DB >> 27608271 |
Ulla Anttalainen1,2,3, Mirja Tenhunen4,5, Ville Rimpilä6, Olli Polo7,8, Esa Rauhala9, Sari-Leena Himanen4,6, Tarja Saaresranta1,2,10.
Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a well-recognized disorder conventionally diagnosed with an elevated apnea-hypopnea index. Prolonged partial upper airway obstruction is a common phenotype of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), which however is still largely underreported. The major reasons for this are that cyclic breathing pattern coupled with arousals and arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation are easy to detect and considered more important than prolonged episodes of increased respiratory effort with increased levels of carbon dioxide in the absence of cycling breathing pattern and repetitive arousals. There is also a growing body of evidence that prolonged partial obstruction is a clinically significant form of SDB, which is associated with symptoms and co-morbidities which may partially differ from those associated with OSAS. Partial upper airway obstruction is most prevalent in women, and it is treatable with the nasal continuous positive pressure device with good adherence to therapy. This review describes the characteristics of prolonged partial upper airway obstruction during sleep in terms of diagnostics, pathophysiology, clinical presentation, and comorbidity to improve recognition of this phenotype and its timely and appropriate treatment.Entities:
Keywords: UARS; flow limitation; increased respiratory resistance; non-apneic snoring; prolonged partial upper airway obstruction; simple snoring; sleep; sleep apnea
Year: 2016 PMID: 27608271 PMCID: PMC5015642 DOI: 10.3402/ecrj.v3.31806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Clin Respir J ISSN: 2001-8525
Fig. 1Example of overnight PtcCO2 and SaO2 profile with expanded view of normal steady breathing, prolonged flow limitation and hypopnea sequence. Note the association between breathing type and PtcCO2 (15). (Reproduced with permission from Respir Physiol Neurobiol). PtcCO2=transcutaneous carbon dioxide; SaO2=arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation.
Definitions and special characteristics of the various terminologies that have been used to describe upper airway dysfunction during sleep
| Prolonged partial obstruction | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OSA | UARS | IRR | Flow limitation | |
| Key sensors | Thermistors, nasal prongs connected to pressure transducer and thoracic/abdominal belts | Esophageal pressure catheter and polysomnography (RERAs with EEG) | Sleep mattress and esophageal pressure | Nasal prongs connected to pressure transducer |
| Patient's respiratory efforts | Periodic breathing (periodic increases in respiratory efforts) | Increased for few breaths | Increased for prolonged periods (1 to over 60 min) | Normal or increased |
| Arousals | Repetitive | Repetitive, terminate each event | Terminates episodes, association to respiration unambiguous | May terminate episodes |
| SaO2 | Repetitive dips | No change | No change or slow desaturation | No change or slow desaturation |
| CO2 | Oscillation | No change | Gradual retention | No change or gradual retention |
OSA=obstructive sleep apnea, UARS=upper airway resistance syndrome, IRR=increased respiratory resistance, RERA=respiratory effort-related arousal, EEG=electroencephalogram, SaO2=arterial oxygen saturation, CO2=carbon dioxide.
Fig. 2Example of a 5-min polysomnography period. At the beginning of the sheet, respiratory movements are stable; flow channel shows slight flow limitation and mouth breathing. Negative esophageal pressure is increased up to −30 cm H2O. Emfit high-frequency channel shows multiple spikes. At the middle of sheet (marked with a black arrow) is a short arousal with opening of upper airway, normalizing esophageal pressure values and cease of spiking. Gradually breathing effort starts to increase again. Channels from top: thoracic and abdominal belts, flow by nasal pressure transducer, esophageal pressure, Emfit high-frequency channel, Emfit low-frequency channel, arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation, snoring, and pulse.
Clinical key features of prolonged partial upper airway obstruction
| Key features of prolonged partial upper airway obstruction | |
|---|---|
| Definition criteria | – Prolonged flow limitation for more than 20–30% of TIB or TST |
| – Crescendo snoring | |
| – CO2 increase during sleep >6 kpa | |
| – Absence of repetitive arousals | |
| Diagnostic findings | – Sustained flow limitation in nasal prongs |
| – Increased respiratory effort (Emfit mattress signal, inductive plethysmography, esophageal pressure) | |
| – Crescendo snoring | |
| Populations at risk | – Children |
| – Females | |
| – Postmenopausal women | |
| – Patients with symptoms of SDB but with low AHI | |
| – Patients on antipsychotic therapy gaining weight | |
| Symptoms | – Fatigue>sleepiness |
| – Depressive symptoms | |
| – Morning headache | |
| – Decreased quality of life | |
| – Similar comorbidity as in SDB with high AHI | |
| Treatment options | – CPAP |
| – Mandibular advancement devices in supine position-dependent partial obstruction | |
| – Surgery unlikely to work | |
AHI=apnea–hypopnea index, CPAP=continuous positive airway pressure, CO2=carbon dioxide, SDB=sleep-disordered breathing, TIB=time in bed, TST=total sleep time.
Fig. 3The three-dimensional figures demonstrate that the associations are non-linear and suggest that in women (left-hand panel) there is a consistently increasing susceptibility for prolonged partial upper airway obstruction after 65 years of age over the entire BMI range, whereas in men (right-hand panel) partial obstruction associates with the combination of high age–high BMI (51). (Reproduced with permission from Respir Physiol Neurobiol).