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1.
Autoadjusting nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) greatly reduces the apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI), and affords a significant reduction in median pressure (P50) compared-with manually titrated conventional nasal CPAP. The aim of the present study was to test whether these benefits were maintained in the medium term at home, in a double-blind crossover study. Ten sequential subjects (mean AHI 52.9 x h(-1)) were enrolled. After a manual titration, subjects were randomly allocated to 2 months autoadjusting nasal CPAP (AutoSet), followed by 2 months with the AutoSet device in fixed pressure mode at the manually titrated pressure, or vice versa. The machine-scored AHI, P50, and median leak were recorded on 12 nights in each arm, and averaged. Mean+/-SEM AHI was 4.0+/-0.3 x h(-1) in auto mode, and 3.7+/-0.3 x h(-1) in manual mode (NS). Mean+/-SEM P50 was 7.2+/-0.4 cmH2O auto, 9.4+/-0.6 cmH2O manual, average reduction 23+/-4% (p<0.0001). Auto "recommended" pressure was (mean+/-SEM) 10.1+/-0.5 cmH2O (p=0.04 with respect to manual) and peak pressure typically 1 cmH2O higher. Median (+/-SEM) leak was 0.181+/-0.006 L x s(-1) auto (and uncorrelated with AHI or pressure), 0.20+/-0.006 L x s(-1) manual (p=0.003). Compliance was 6.3+/-0.4 h in auto mode and 6.1+/-0.5 h in fixed mode (NS). Apnoea/hypopnoea index during 2 months of home autoadjusting nasal continuous positive airway pressure is comparable to that during conventionally titrated fixed pressure continuous positive airway pressure, while affording a 23% reduction in median pressure but no increase in compliance. Leak did not importantly affect autoadjustment.  相似文献   

2.
Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is an established treatment of obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS). While it is known that CPAP reverses the pathological breathing pattern and improves daytime sleepiness, there are no sufficient data on the long-term influence of CPAP on quality of life in patients with OSAS. Thirty-nine patients with polysomnographically verified OSAS (apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI): (mean+/-SD) 46.8+/-21.8 events x h(-1)) were prospectively studied. All patients answered three quality of life measures (Complaint List, Nottingham Health Profile Part 1 (NHP), and Verbal Analogue-Scale "quality of life") prior to the initiation of CPAP therapy. After a mean of 9 months they were re-evaluated by polysomnography, and completed the questionnaires once again. As expected, CPAP was effective in treating the sleep-related breathing disorder. AHI decreased significantly from (mean+/-SD) 46.8+/-21.8 events x h(-1) to 3.3+/-6.3 events x h(-1), and minimum oxygen saturation increased from 77.1+/-9.3% to 89.9+/-3.4%, while body mass index did not change significantly (31.3+/-5.4 versus 30.8+/-4.8 kg x m(-2)). During long-term treatment with CPAP the Complaint List revealed a significant improvement of the extent of subjective impairment due to physical and general complaints (26.4+/-9.9 versus 20.4+/-11.1), and NHP a significant improvement of emotional reactions (19.8+/-21.7 versus 11.1+/-14.0) and energy (50.8+/-36.6 versus 32.1+/-36.7), but not of pain, physical mobility, sleep, social isolation, and quality of life as assessed by the It is concluded that long-term continuous positive airway pressure therapy is effective in improving not only pathological breathing patterns but also parameters that estimate quality of life in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome.  相似文献   

3.
Patients with chronic congestive cardiac failure (CCF) frequently suffer from central sleep apnoea syndrome (CSAS). Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) has been suggested as a treatment. The authors hypothesised that bilevel ventilation might be easier to initiate and superior to CPAP at correcting the sleep-related abnormality of breathing in patients with CCF. After excluding those with a history suggestive of obstructive sleep apnoea, 35 patients with CCF (left ventricular ejection fraction <35%) were screened with overnight oximetry and the diagnosis of CSAS was established with polysomnography in 18. Two 14-day cycles of CPAP (0.85 kPa (8.5 mbar)) or bilevel ventilation (0.85/0.3 kPa (8.5/3 mbar)) in random order, were compared in a crossover study. Sixteen patients (13 males), mean age 62.0+/-7.4 yrs completed the study. The pretreatment apnoea/hypopnoea index of 26.7+/-10.7 was significantly reduced by CPAP and bilevel ventilation to 7.7+/-5.6 and 6.5+/-6.6, respectively. The arousal index fell from 31.1+/-10.0 per hour of sleep to 15.7+/-5.4 and 16.4+/-6.9, respectively. Significant and equal improvements with CPAP and bilevel ventilation were found for sleep quality, daytime fatigue, circulation time and New York Heart Association class. The authors conclude that continuous positive airway pressure and bilevel ventilation equally and effectively improve Cheyne-Stokes respiration in patients with congestive cardiac failure.  相似文献   

4.
Baroreflex control of heart rate during sleep (baroreflex sensitivity; BRS) has been shown to be depressed in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), and improved after treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Whether CPAP also acutely affects BRS during sleep in uncomplicated severe OSA is still debatable. Blood pressure was monitored during nocturnal polysomnography in 18 patients at baseline and during first-time CPAP application. Spontaneous BRS was analysed by the sequence method, and estimated as the mean sequence slope. CPAP did not acutely affect mean blood pressure or heart rate but decreased cardiovascular variability during sleep. Mean BRS increased slightly during CPAP application (from 6.5+/-2.4 to 7.5+/-2.9 ms x mmHg(-1)), mostly in response to decreasing blood pressure. The change in BRS did not correlate with changes in arterial oxygen saturation or apnoea/hypopnoea index. The small change in baroreflex control of heart rate during sleep at first application of continuous positive airway pressure in severe obstructive sleep apnoea was unrelated to the acute resolution of nocturnal hypoxaemia, and might reflect autonomic adjustments to positive intrathoracic pressure, and/or improved sleep architecture. The small increase in baroreflex control of heart rate during sleep may be of clinical relevance as it was accompanied by reduced cardiovascular variability, which is acknowledged as an independent cardiovascular risk factor.  相似文献   

5.
Auto-adjustable continuous positive airway pressure (APAP) devices are an emerging treatment alternative to fixed-pressure continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy for obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. They have been engineered to automatically adjust the pressure to the optimal level on a continuous basis. However, not all APAP technologies use the same algorithm. Three different APAP devices (Autoset Spirit, Breas PV 10i and RemStar Auto) were compared in a randomised crossover trial in patients already established on fixed-pressure CPAP therapy. The outcome measures were compliance, quality of life and side-effects. Twenty-seven middle-aged patients (25 male) previously diagnosed with severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (median (interquartile range) apnoea/hypopnoea index 48 (29-76)), established on CPAP therapy for >3 yrs, were randomised to each APAP device for 4 weeks. Mean pressure and patient compliance were significantly lower on the Breas PV 10i than on the other APAP devices. The devices were similar in terms of quality of life, daytime sleepiness and upper airway side-effects, but patients evaluated them significantly differently in terms of device features, sleep quality and pressure comfort, with the Breas PV 10i being the least popular. Auto-adjustable positive airway pressure devices differ in pressure delivery and patient compliance in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome patients.  相似文献   

6.
We evaluated the efficacy of two different continuous positive airway pressure devices with automatic mask pressure adjustment (autoCPAP) in comparison with fixed CPAP in treating obstructive sleep apnea syndrome in 29 patients. The mean (+/- SE) apnea-hypopnea index was 46 +/- 4 per hour and the Epworth score was 14.2 +/- 0.7. Patients were treated over three consecutive 1-month periods with three regimens in random order: an autoCPAP device responding to apnea-hypopnea and snoring, another autoCPAP device responding to snoring and changes in flow contour, and fixed CPAP at the 90th pressure percentile titrated by autoCPAP over 2 weeks. Allowed pressure in the autoCPAP mode was 4 to 15 cm H2O. At the end of each treatment period, symptoms, quality of life, vigilance, and nocturnal breathing disturbances were evaluated. All three treatment modalities improved symptoms, quality-of-life domains, and apnea-hypopnea index significantly and to a similar degree. Mean (+/- SE) maintenance-of-wakefulness time increased by 4.5 +/- 1.8, 6.0 +/- 1.5, and 6.1 +/- 1.4 minutes with DeVilbiss AutoAdjust LT, AutoSet T, and fixed-pressure CPAP, respectively (p<0.001 vs. baseline, p=not significant for comparisons among the three modalities). We conclude that both autoCPAP devices were equally effective as fixed-pressure CPAP in improving major outcomes during short-term therapy of sleep apnea.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Determination of the therapeutic pressure during continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy is usually performed by a technician during polysomnography. In recent years, several devices for automated adjustment of the therapeutic pressure by the means of computerized algorithms were developed. The aims of the present study were to compare two different devices for automated titration and to verify if unattended automated titration is a feasible strategy to determine the therapeutic CPAP. METHODS: We enrolled 16 consecutive patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) defined by an apnea-hypopnea index > 20/h. Automated titration was performed in the hospital using two CPAP devices (Autoset; Resmed; North Ryde, Australia; and Somnosmart; Weinmann; Hamburg, Germany) in random order for 2 consecutive nights, based on different signals for the detection of respiratory events. During titration, there was no direct supervision by a technician, and polysomnography was not recorded. We defined the therapeutic pressure as the 95th percentile of the airway pressure over time (P95). RESULTS: We observed significant differences of the P95 between the two devices, with an average of 7.0 +/- 2.5 cm H(2)O for the Somnosmart and 9.9 +/- 2.6 cm H(2)O for the Autoset (p = 0.005) [mean +/- SD]. There was a considerable lack of agreement between the two devices, with a bias of 3.0 cm H(2)O and limits of agreement ranging from + 9.3 to - 3.2 cm H(2)O. We found no significant correlation between the paired differences of P95 and either indexes of severity of OSAS or lung function variables. CONCLUSION: Automated titration based on the analyses of flow (Autoset) or forced oscillations (Somnosmart) predicted significant different therapeutic pressures for fixed CPAP therapy. Thus, unattended automated titration performed during 1 night of hospital stay with commercially available devices cannot be used to determine accurately the therapeutic CPAP in patients with OSAS.  相似文献   

8.
Split-night versus full-night studies for sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Investigation and treatment of sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS) is placing increasing demands on healthcare resources. This workload may be reduced by using split-night studies instead of the standard full-nights of diagnostic polysomnography and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration. Split-night studies involve polysomnography in the first half of the night followed, if there is an abnormal frequency of apnoeas and hypopneas, by CPAP titration for the remainder of the night. The authors' database of all patients prescribed a CPAP trial 1991-1997 was used to compare long-term outcomes in all 49 (46 accepting CPAP) patients prescribed split-night studies with those in full-night patients, matched 1:2 using an apnoea/ hypopnoea index (AHI) of +/-15% and Epworth score of +/-3 units. Classical symptoms of SAHS were the main reason for the split-night studies (n=27). There were no differences between the groups in long-term CPAP use, median nightly CPAP use (split-night 6.0 h x night-1, interquartile range (IQR) 3.8-7.4, full-night; 6.2 h x night-1, IQR 3.7-7.0, p=0.9), post-treatment Epworth scores and frequency of nursing interventions/clinic visits required. The median time from referral to treatment was less for the split-night patients (13 months, IQR 11-20 months) than for full-night patients (22 months, IQR 12-34 months; p=0.003). Split-night studies, in selected patients, result in equivalent long-term continuous positive airway pressure use to full-night studies with shorter treatment times and less healthcare utilization.  相似文献   

9.
The impact of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment on the airway responsiveness of asthmatic subjects with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) has scarcely been studied. A prospective study was performed comparing the changes in airway responsiveness and quality of life in stable asthmatic OSA patients, before and 6 weeks after their nocturnal CPAP treatment. A total of 20 subjects (11 males and nine females) participated in the study. With the nocturnal CPAP treatment, the apnoea/hypopnoea index dropped from 48.1 +/- 23.6 x h(-1) to 2.6 +/- 2.5 x h(-1). There were no significant changes in airway responsiveness after CPAP treatment (provocative concentration causing a 20% fall in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV(1); PC(20) 2.5 mg x mL(-1) (1.4-4.5)) compared with baseline (PC(20) 2.2 mg x mL(-1) (1.3-3.5)). There was no significant change in FEV(1) either. However, the asthma quality of life of the subjects improved from 5.0 +/- 1.2 at baseline to 5.8 +/- 0.9 at the end of the study. In conclusion, nocturnal continuous positive airway pressure treatment did not alter airway responsiveness or forced expiratory volume in one second in subjects with stable mild-to-moderate asthma and newly diagnosed obstructive sleep apnoea. However, nocturnal continuous positive airway pressure treatment did improve asthma quality of life.  相似文献   

10.
Upper airway obstruction in the sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS) can be easily assessed by measuring respiratory impedance with the forced oscillation technique (FOT). This methodology has been proposed as a useful clinical tool both for the diagnosis of sleep breathing disorders and for continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration. However, previous studies suggest that the application of high-frequency pressure oscillation to the upper airway may induce changes in the electroencephalogram (EEG) or upper airway muscle function. The effect of FOT measurements on upper airway muscle tone and EEG in clinical sleep studies was examined. Seven patients with moderate SAHS were included (age: 54+/-11 yrs; apnoea/hypopnoea index: 43+/-21 events x h(-1); body mass index: 30+/-2 kg x m(-2)). Genioglossus surface electromyogram activity (EMGgg) and EEG signal were analysed with and without FOT application (frequency: 5 Hz and 30 Hz; peak-to-peak pressure oscillation: 1 cmH2O) during stable sleep. Measurements were carried out in two different situations. Step 1: applying FOT during episodes of obstructive events or flow limitation; and step 2: during prolonged periods of normal breathing at optimal CPAP. The root mean square of EMGgg activity and fast Fourier analysis (alpha and delta bands) of the EEG signal were performed. The application of FOT did not increase EMGgg activity in any of the situations studied. In addition, no evidence of the effects on EEG was found: alpha/delta relationship: awake:0.70, baseline sleep:0.13, FOT(5 Hz):0.18, FOT(30 Hz):0.11. The presented results suggest that the use of forced oscillation technique over the ranges of frequency and amplitude proposed for clinical sleep studies does not induce changes in upper airway muscle activity and neurological variables in patients with sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome.  相似文献   

11.
The forced oscillation technique (FOT) has been demonstrated to be a very sensitive tool for the assessment of upper airway obstruction during nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy for obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). The present study was designed to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of a novel auto-CPAP device based exclusively on the FOT. Following manual CPAP titration, 18 patients with OSA (mean apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) 48.0+/-28.1) were allocated to conventional CPAP and auto-CPAP treatment under polysomnographic control in randomized order. The patients were asked to assess their subjective daytime sleepiness using the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS). The mean AHI during auto-CPAP treatment was 3.4+/-3.4 and was comparable with that obtained during conventional CPAP treatment (4.2+/-3.6). The analysis of sleep architecture, the arousal index (6.6+/-2.1 versus 7.3+/-4.4) or the ESS (5.6+/-1.8 versus 7.3+/-4.4) did not reveal any significant differences. However, the mean CPAP pressure during auto-CPAP treatment (0.84+/-0.26 kPa) and in particular the pressure applied in the lateral body position (0.74+/-0.35 kPa), was significantly lower than that employed in conventional CPAP treatment (0.93+/-0.16 kPa, both comparisons: p<0.05). The auto-continuous positive airway pressure device proved equally as effective as conventional continuous positive airway pressure. However, the mean treatment pressure was significantly reduced, especially when patients were sleeping in the lateral position.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of the present study was to analyse the role of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension (DC-HT) and sleep apnoea. An Autoset (ResMed, Sydney, Australia) study was performed in 60 patients diagnosed with DC-HT based on two 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitorisation (ABPM) studies. CPAP was offered to patients with an apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) > or =15 events.h(-1). After 3 months of treatment, repeat ABPM was performed to evaluate the effect of CPAP upon the blood pressure values. A total of 39 (65%) patients received CPAP treatment, but only 33 completed the study. The mean+/-sd systolic and diastolic blood pressures (SBP and DBP, respectively) were 154.8+/-14 and 90+/-8.8 mmHg. Patients had a mean+/-sd AHI of 37.7+/-18.2 events.h(-1). Only three patients presented a dipper nocturnal pressure pattern. CPAP treatment significantly reduced SBP (-5.2 mmHg), and particularly the nocturnal values (-6.1 mmHg), but not DBP. Considering only those patients who tolerated CPAP, the decrease in SBP was greater (-7.3 mmHg). Furthermore, CPAP treatment significantly increased the percentage of patients who recovered the dipper pattern (three (9.1%) out of 33 versus 12 (36.4%) out of 33). Continuous positive airway pressure treatment significantly reduces systolic blood pressure, particularly at night, and normalises the nocturnal pressure pattern in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension and sleep apnoea.  相似文献   

13.
The present study objective was to establish whether pretreatment social cognitive variables may contribute to the explanation of variance in adherence to continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment for patients with obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (OSAHS). A total of 119 of 180 consecutive OSAHS patients were recruited to the study prior to initial CPAP titration. Patients completed psychological measures of health value, health locus of control (incorporating internality, chance, powerful others) and self-efficacy prior to CPAP titration. Objective adherence data were measured by CPAP unit time clocks and collected at 3-month follow-up. Average nightly use was calculated over this period. Logistic regression of prospective predictors of adherence produced a model comprising psychological (health value, internality, powerful others), as well as clinical variables (Epworth score, body mass index, apnoea/hypopnoea index, CPAP pressure). This model explained 24% of the variance in CPAP use, and correctly identified 75% of adherers and 53% of nonadherers. Although the psychological variables explained only a small amount of the overall variance in adherence behaviour, this result provides further support for the hypothesis that psychological variables contribute, in part, to continuous positive airway pressure adherence. Future research should focus on highlighting discrete variables, which may helpfully inform psychologically based interventions aimed at improving the use of continuous positive airway pressure by patients with obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome at risk of discontinuance.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) improves cardiac function in chronic heart failure (CHF) patients with central sleep apnea (CSA)-Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) by stabilizing ventilation, but frequently central apneas and hypopneas persist. Our objective was to test the hypothesis that flow-targeted dynamic bilevel positive airway pressure (BPAP) support (BiPAP autoSV; Respironics; Murrysville, PA) effectively suppresses CSR-CSA in CHF patients. METHODS: We studied 14 CHF patients with CSR-CSA (and residual CSA on positive airway pressure therapy) during 3 consecutive nights: (1) diagnostic polysomnography, (2) CPAP (n=10) or BPAP (n=4) titration, and (3) dynamic flow-targeted dynamic BPAP support with an expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP) set to suppress obstructive respiratory events, and an inspiratory positive airway pressure (IPAP) dynamically ranging between 0 and 15 cm H2O above the EPAP. RESULTS: CPAP or BPAP significantly reduced the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) [mean+/-SD, 46+/-4 events/h to 22+/-4 events/h; p=0.001] compared to the first night without treatment. Flow-targeted dynamic BPAP support (mean EPAP, 6.5+/-1.7 cm H2O; maximal IPAP, 21.9+/-2.1 cm H2O) further reduced the AHI to 4+/-1/h of sleep compared to the untreated (p<0.001) and CPAP or BPAP night (p=0.002). After the first night of flow-targeted dynamic BPAP support, patients rated on an analog scale (range, 0 to 10) the treatment as comfortable (6.9+/-0.6), and the sleep quality as improved compared to previous nights (7.4+/-0.6). CONCLUSION: Flow-targeted dynamic BPAP support effectively suppresses CSR-CSA in patients with CHF and is well tolerated.  相似文献   

15.
Obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS) is a common disorder in obesity. Leptin, an adipocyte-derived signalling factor, plays an important role in metabolic control. There is growing evidence that leptin regulation is altered in OSAS. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that effective treatment will influence leptin levels in OSAS patients. Serum leptin levels were determined in 86 consecutive patients (aged 57.5 +/- 11.0 yrs) with polysomnographically verified OSAS. In addition, leptin levels were reassessed and treatment efficacy was evaluated by polysomnography after 6 months of therapy. Patients were treated with continuous or bilevel positive airway pressure, a mandibular advancement device or conservatively, depending on the clinical symptoms. Mean serum leptin levels did not change with treatment in the whole study group (7.3 +/- 5.0 versus 7.5 +/- 4.8 ng.mL-1), however, leptin levels decreased in effectively treated patients (8.5 +/- 5.0 versus 7.4 +/- 5.1 ng.mL-1) while they increased in ineffectively treated patients (5.0 +/- 4.0 versus 7.7 +/- 4.1 ng.mL-1). Furthermore, not only was there a significant and independent correlation between the change in leptin levels with treatment and the change in body mass index, but also with the change in apnoea/hypopnoea index. Effective treatment of sleep-disordered breathing may have significant effects on leptin levels in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome patients. Changes in leptin levels are related to changes in apnoea/hypopnoea index in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome patients.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of sleep stage- and body position-dependence of sleep apnoea on treatment efficacy and compliance between conventional continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and auto CPAP therapy was evaluated. Thirty-three newly treated sleep apnoea hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS) patients were randomly allocated to conventional or auto-CPAP therapy. Six patients of each treatment group were classified as having sleep stage- and body position-dependent obstructive breathing abnormalities according to the results of the baseline sleep study. After 3 weeks of treatment, the Epworth sleepiness score tended to be higher (p = 0.08) and the ability to stay awake lower (p = 0.02) in patients with dependent breathing abnormalities treated with fixed CPAP, than in the other patients. The effective pressure/time index was significantly lower in sleep stage- and body position-dependent patients treated with fixed CPAP, than in the other patients (p = 0.02). The number of hours the machine was turned on and a positive pressure applied, tended to be smaller in dependent patients treated with fixed CPAP than in independent patients of this treatment group and in patients treated with auto-CPAP. A night-to-night variability index (VI) of positive pressure changes was obtained in the auto-CPAP group. This index significantly decreased with time in the dependent patients while it remained unchanged in the independent group. It is concluded that auto-continuous positive airway pressure may have specific indications in a subset of obstructive sleep apnoea patients with sleep stage- and body position dependent nocturnal breathing abnormalities.  相似文献   

17.
STUDY OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to compare comfort parameters and pressure profiles of the AutoSet (Resmed) and the SOMNOsmart (Weinmann), two auto-adjustable positive airway pressure (APAP) devices. SETTING: The sleep disorders center of a university hospital. DESIGN: A single-blind randomized trial protocol was applied. A split night procedure allowed each patient to be treated in a crossover fashion with both APAP devices during one overnight study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifty consecutive obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients were recruited. Each patient filled out an evaluation form for both devices after the study night. Visual analogue scales were used to score four comfort measures. Three CPAP outcomes generated by the devices (P50, P95 and Pmax) were assessed, compared with each other and correlated with the individually predicted CPAP (Ppred). RESULTS: Forty-five males and 5 females, mean age 53.0 years, body mass index 31.0, were included. The mean apnea-hypopnea index was 58.7, the mean arousal index was 54.3. Mean CPAP-compliance before the titration study was 4.9 h per night. Comparison of the two devices regarding the effect on the subjective sleep quality parameters showed no differences. The AutoSet pressure outcomes correlated significantly better with Ppred in comparison with the SOMNOsmart. The P50 and P95 but not the Pmax values were significantly lower in the SOMNOsmart as compared with the AutoSet (P50: 5.1+/-1.3 vs 7.1 +/- 1.9 mbar, P<0.0001; P95: 7.8+/-3.0 vs 9.6+/-1.9 mbar, P<0.0005; Pmax: 10.0+/-3.4 vs 10.8+/-1.8 mbar, NS). CONCLUSION: While the subjective tolerance of the two APAP machines was comparable, these devices were characterized by different pressure profiles. The pressure parameters of the AutoSet correlated better with Ppred than those of the SOMNOsmart.  相似文献   

18.
In order to study the frequency and the mechanisms of daytime pulmonary hypertension (PH) in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS) lung function tests, blood gas analysis and right-heart catheterization were performed in 46 consecutive patients. OSAS was assessed by polysomnography. 9 patients only (20%) had PH (mean pulmonary artery pressure (Ppa) greater than or equal to 20 mmHg). Patients with PH had lower daytime PaO2 (60.8 +/- 7.6 vs. 76.2 +/- 9.4 mmHg; p less than 0.001), higher daytime PaCO2 (44.8 +/- 4.2 vs. 38.0 +/- 4.0 mmHg; p less than 0.001), lower forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume (FEV1) (p less than 0.001), but the severity of OSAS was not different whether PH was present or not (apnoea index: 62 +/- 34 hour in the PH group vs. 65 +/- 40 hour, apnoea + hypopnoea index 102 +/- 33 hour in the PH group vs. 86 +/- 36 hour, lowest sleep SaO2: 59 +/- 21% in the PH group vs. 66 +/- 18%). There were significant correlations between Ppa and: daytime PaO2 (r = -0.61; p less than 0.001), PaCO2 (r = 0.55; p less than 0.001), FEV1 (r = -0.52; p less than 0.001) but not between Ppa and apnoea index, apnoea + hypopnoea index, lowest sleep SaO2. PH and daytime hypoxaemia were associated either with chronic airway obstruction or with severe obesity.  相似文献   

19.
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Autoadjustable continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) devices are increasingly used in the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Since different measurements of upper airway obstruction are applied, it is uncertain whether these devices are equally effective in controlling sleep-disordered breathing. Hypothesizing that differences in therapeutic efficacy were to come out, we compared the performance of the AutoSet device (ResMed; Sydney, Australia), which features autoadjustable positive airway pressure (APAP) guided by detection of flow limitation (APAPfl), with the SOMNOsmart device (Weinmann; Hamburg, Germany), which features APAP guided by the forced oscillation technique (APAPfot). DESIGN: A double-blind, randomized, cross-over trial. SETTING: The sleep disorders center and sleep laboratory of a university hospital. PATIENTS AND INTERVENTIONS: An overnight CPAP autotitration procedure was performed in 30 patients with OSA. A split-night protocol allowed that each patient used both devices. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Using polysomnography, sleep, indexes of sleep-disordered breathing, snoring, and CPAP levels were recorded. No significant differences were found in conventional sleep variables. While the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) was lower with APAPfl (3.5 +/- 5.6/h) as compared to APAPfot (9.9 +/- 31.0/h), the difference was not statistically significant (mean +/- SD). The snoring index, however, was significantly lower with APAPfl (35.3 +/- 53.7/h vs 111.6 +/- 175.4/h, respectively; p = 0.01). The median and 95th percentile pressure levels rose from wakefulness to sleep in APAPfl, but decreased in APAPfot. Higher pressure variability was present in the latter method. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that the APAPfl is superior to APAPfot in the control of snoring. While a lower AHI was achieved with APAPfl, at the expense of a higher median pressure but less pressure variability, the difference with APAPfot was not statistically significant.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this study was to investigate whether chronic continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) affects blood pressure (BP) responsiveness to obstructive events occurring on the first night of CPAP withdrawal in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) after chronic treatment. Thirteen male subjects with severe OSA underwent nocturnal polysomnography with beat-by-beat BP monitoring before treatment and after 4.9 +/- 3.4 months of home CPAP (mean daily use 5.1 +/- 1.7 h). Variations in oxyhaemoglobin saturation (deltaSa,O2), systolic (deltaPs), and diastolic (deltaPd) BP within nonrapid eye movement apnoeas and hypopnoeas were measured on a sample of pre- and post-treatment events. In addition, a pretreatment sample was selected for deltaSa,O2 to match post-treatment events. The higher the mean deltaSa,O2 was in the full pretreatment sample, the more deltaSa,O2, deltaPs and deltaPd were attenuated after treatment. Mean deltaPs decreased from 47.3 +/- 8.5 in the full pretreatment sample to 42.2 +/- 6.9 in the selected pretreatment sample, to 31.5 +/- 5.9 mmHg in the post-treatment sample. The post-treatment value differed significantly from both the pretreatment values. The corresponding values for mean deltaPd were 27.0 +/- 3.5, 24.0 +/- 3.1 and 19.6 +/- 3.7 mmHg, with all values differing significantly from each other. Chronic continuous positive airway pressure is followed by a decrease in apnoea/ hypopnoea-related blood pressure swings, possibly secondary to both reduced severity of event-related hypoxaemia and decreased responsiveness to obstructive events secondary to chronic prevention of nocturnal intermittent hypoxaemia.  相似文献   

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