| Literature DB >> 33214924 |
Rebecca F D'Cruz1,2,3, Patrick B Murphy1,2,3, Georgios Kaltsakas1,2,3.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) causes load-capacity-drive imbalance in both wakefulness and sleep, principally driven by expiratory flow limitation and hyperinflation. Sleep imposes additional burdens to the respiratory muscle pump, driven by changes in respiratory muscle tone, neural respiratory drive and consequences of the supine position. COPD patients are therefore at higher risk of decompensation during sleep, which may manifest as altered sleep architecture, isolated nocturnal desaturation, sleep hypoventilation and restless legs. Each form of sleep disordered breathing in COPD is associated with adverse clinical and patient-reported outcomes, including increased risk of exacerbations, hospitalisation, cardiovascular events, reduced survival and poorer quality of life. COPD-obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) overlap syndrome represents a distinct clinical diagnosis, in which clinical outcomes are significantly worse than in either disease alone, including increased mortality, risk of cardiovascular events, hospitalisation and exacerbation frequency. Sleep disordered breathing is under-recognised by COPD patients and their clinicians, however early diagnosis and management is crucial to reduce the risk of adverse clinical outcomes. In this narrative review, we describe the pathophysiology of COPD and physiological changes that occur during sleep, manifestations and diagnosis of sleep disordered breathing in COPD and associated clinical outcomes. 2020 Journal of Thoracic Disease. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: COPD-obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) overlap; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD); pulmonary mechanics; respiratory physiology; sleep; sleep disordered breathing
Year: 2020 PMID: 33214924 PMCID: PMC7642631 DOI: 10.21037/jtd-cus-2020-006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thorac Dis ISSN: 2072-1439 Impact factor: 2.895
Figure 1Illustration of the bidirectional relationship between sequelae of sleep-disturbance and adverse clinical outcomes in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Figure 2Schematic representation of load-capacity-drive imbalance of the respiratory muscle pump during exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Figure 3Physiological changes during wakefulness and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep including diaphragm electromyography (EMGdi pairs 1–5) from a multipair oesophageal electrode catheter, air flow at the mouth from a pneumotachograph, transcutaneous carbon dioxide (TcCO2) and peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2). Data obtained from a patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Classification of sleep disordered breathing in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), diagnostic criteria and associated clinical outcomes (data collated from references 7,8,17-23)
| Manifestation of sleep disordered breathing | Diagnostics | Clinical outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Altered sleep architecture | Polysomnography to evaluate: | Subjective sleep disturbance is associated with: |
| • Sleep latency | • Increased frequency of COPD exacerbation and healthcare utilisation | |
| • Arousal frequency | • Increased daytime breathlessness and cough | |
| • Sleep efficiency | ||
| • Total sleep time | ||
| • Time spent in each sleep stage | ||
| Isolated nocturnal desaturation | >30% of total sleep time with oxygen saturation under 90% or mean overnight oxygen saturation under 90% on pulse oximetry | Chronic intermittent hypoxia may be linked with adverse cardiovascular outcomes including: |
| • Cardiac arrythmias | ||
| • Hypertension | ||
| • Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events | ||
| Sleep hypoventilation | Increased carbon dioxide (arterial, transcutaneous or end-tidal) either: | Reduced survival |
| • To a value >55 mmHg for ≥10 minutes or | • Increased risk of hospitalisation | |
| • By ≥10 mmHg compared to during wakefulness to a value >50 mmHg for 10 minutes | • Increased symptom burden | |
| • Reduce health-related quality of life | ||
| Restless legs | Patient reported | Correlated with: |
| • Daytime symptoms | ||
| • Subjective sleep quality | ||
| COPD-OSA overlap syndrome | (I). Spirometric confirmation of expiratory flow limitation and | • Reduced survival from excess cardiovascular events |
| (II). Confirmation of obstructive sleep apnoea using polysomnography or respiratory polygraphy | • Increased risk of hospitalisation | |
| • Increased risk of COPD exacerbation | ||
| • Reduced quality of life |
Figure 4Example of overnight oximetry in a patient with nocturnal hypoxia. Episodes of nocturnal desaturation that are likely related to rapid eye movement (REM) stage sleep are highlighted in green.
Figure 5Excess load-capacity-drive imbalance during rapid eye movement (REM)-sleep in COPD leading to nocturnal hypoventilation. Abbreviations: VT, tidal volume; VE, minute ventilation; VD, dead space volume.