| Literature DB >> 32468236 |
Jenni Vaarno1, Jyri Myller2, Adel Bachour3, Heli Koskinen1, Leif Bäck1, Tuomas Klockars1, Anni Koskinen4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We have previously demonstrated that dogs can be trained to distinguish the urine of patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) from that of healthy controls based on olfaction. Encouraged by these promising results, we wanted to investigate if a detection dog could work as a screening tool for OSA. The objective of this study was to prospectively assess the dogs' ability to identify sleep apnea in patients with OSA suspicion.Entities:
Keywords: Detection dog; Diagnostics; OSA; Obstructive sleep apnea; Screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 32468236 PMCID: PMC7679355 DOI: 10.1007/s11325-020-02113-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Breath ISSN: 1520-9512 Impact factor: 2.816
Patient characteristics in OSA categories
| No OSA | Mild OSA | Moderate OSA | Severe OSA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 7 | 16 | 10 | 17 |
| Women, | 1 (14) | 4 (25) | 3 (30) | 3 (18) |
| Smoker, | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (20) | 4 (24) |
| Age, mean (SD) | 41 (14) | 48 (12) | 60 (8) | 56 (14) |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 28 (4) | 28 (2) | 31 (7) | 33 (6) |
| REI, mean (SD) | 2 (3) | 9 (3) | 24 (4) | 51 (21) |
No OSA = REI < 5, Mild = 5 ≤ REI <15, Moderate = 15 ≤ REI < 30, Severe = REI ≤ 30
REI respiratory event index, BMI body mass index, SD standard deviation, n number
Fig. 1Dogs’ percentage (%) of right answers in OSA categories: No OSA = REI < 5, mild = 5 ≤ REI <15, moderate = 15 ≤ REI < 30, severe = REI ≤ 30. REI, respiratory event index