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Prognosis of the middle-aged and aged patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
Authors:AKIKO NODA PhD    TAMOTSU OKADA MD  PhD    FUMIHIKO YASUMA MD  PhD    TOSHIKAZU SOBUE MD  PhD    NOBUO NAKASHIMA MD  PhD   MITSUHIRO YOKOTA MD  PhD FACC
Affiliation:Nagoya University School of Health Sciences, Nagoya University College of Medical Technology, Department of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Vie First Department of Internal Medicine, Nagoya University Hospital, Nagoya, Japan
Abstract:Abstract The long-term natural course of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is studied in order to determine whether severity of nocturnal oxygen desaturation associated with apnea/hypopnea, body mass index (BMI), and hypertension influence survival in young (<40 years), middle-aged (40–64 years), and aged (65 years) using a questionnaire survey. One hundred and forty-eight patients with OSAS aged 17–78 years (136 men, 12 women, mean 52.0±12.3 yean), who were diagnosed by standard polysomnography (PSG) between 1983 and 1993, participated in the study. The survey revealed 15 deaths and 101 survivors; 32 subjects could not be located. The survival rate was 71.4% (95% confidence interval:55.6–87.2%). The survival rate in patients with OSAS was significantly lower than that in the age and sex-adjusted control Japanese population (87.6%). In the young group, only one death (a 19–year-old woman) occurred unexpectedly during sleep. The patient showed an apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) of 33 per h and the length of time that the nocturnal oxygen saturation (SaO2) fell below 90% (time of SaO2 < 90%) of 205 min. The survival rate in middle-aged patients with OSAS was significantly lower than that in the age and sex-adjusted control Japanese population (79.2 vs 91.0%), but this pattern was not seen among the aged. Time of SaO2 <90% was significantly longer in the middle-aged patients than in the aged patients, but AHI did not differ between the two groups. Moreover, it was significantly correlated with AHI in middle-aged patients, but not in the aged patients. The survival rate was significantly lower in patients with hypertension than in the patients without such complications in the middle-aged group (57.9 vs 90.4%). Cox proportional-hazard regression model including age, hypertension, BMI, AHI, lowest SaO2, and time of SaO2 <90% showed that hypertension was only significantly associated with lower survival rate in total group and middle-aged patients, but not in the young or aged patients. The prognosis in patients with OSAS may differ among the generations. The prognosis in the middle-aged population may depend on the role of OSAS on the complications of hypertension or severity of oxygen desaturation, but not on AHI only.
Keywords:aging    hypertension    obstructive sleep apnea syndrome    oxygen desaturation    prognosis
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