Objective:To estimate the frequency, mechanisms and predictive factors of sleep apnoea syndrome (SAS) in a large group of children and adults with type I (CMI) and II (CMII) Chiari malformation ...(CM).Background:The anatomical and functional integrity of both respiratory circuits and lower cranial nerves controlling the upper airway is necessary for breathing control during sleep. These latter structures may be altered in CM, and a few investigations have reported CM related sleep disordered breathing.Methods:Forty-six consecutive unrelated patients with CM (40 CMI, six CMII), of which 20 were children (eight males) and 26 were adults (12 males), underwent physical, neurological and oto-rhino-laryngoscopic examination, MRI and polysomnography.Results:SAS was present in 31 (67.4%) of the patients with CM (70% of CMI, 50% of CMII, including mainly children). Sixty per cent of children with CM exhibited SAS, including 35% with obstructive (OSAS) and 25% with central (CSAS) sleep apnoea syndrome. SAS was observed in 73% of CM adults (57.7% OSAS, 15.4% CSAS). Severe SAS was found in 23% of CM adults. Multiple regression analysis revealed that age, type II Chiari and vocal cord paralysis predicted the central apnoea index.Conclusion:SAS is highly prevalent in all age groups of patients suffering from CM. CSAS, a rare condition in the general population, was common among the patients with CM in our study. Sleep disordered breathing associated with CM may explain the high frequency of respiratory failures observed during curative surgery of CM. Our results suggest that SAS should be systematically screened for in patients with CM, especially before surgery.
The percentage of compliant continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)-treated apnoeic patients that continue to experience residual excessive sleepiness (RES) is unknown. RES was defined by an ...Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) score of >or=11. In total, 502 patients from 37 French sleep centres using CPAP >3 h night(-1) attending their 1-yr follow-up visit were eligible. ESS and polysomnographic data as well as symptoms, quality of life, depression scores and objective CPAP compliance at 1 yr were collected. Overall, 60 patients remained sleepy on CPAP (ESS 14.3+/-2.5) leading to a prevalence rate of RES of 12.0% (95% confidence interval (CI) 9.1-14.8). After having excluded associated restless leg syndrome, major depressive disorder and narcolepsy as confounding causes, the final prevalence rate of RES was 6.0% (95% CI 3.9-8.01). Patients with RES were younger and more sleepy at diagnosis. The relative risk of having RES was 5.3 (95% CI 1.6-22.1), when ESS before treatment was >or=11. Scores of emotional and energy Nottingham Health Profile domains were two times worse in patients with RES. As 230,000 obstructive sleep apnoea patients are currently treated in France by continuous positive airway pressure, more than 13,800 of them might suffer from residual excessive sleepiness.
Objective: To compare compliance with and effectiveness of adaptive servoventilation (ASV) versus continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in patients with the central sleep apnoea syndrome (CSA) ...with Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) and with congestive heart failure in terms of the apnoea–hypopnoea index (AHI), quality of life, and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) over six months. Methods: 25 patients (age 28–80 years, New York Heart Association (NYHA) class II–IV) with stable congestive heart failure and CSA-CSR were randomly assigned to either CPAP or ASV. At inclusion, both groups were comparable for NYHA class, LVEF, medical treatment, body mass index, and CSA-CSR. Results: Both ASV and CPAP decreased the AHI but, noticeably, only ASV completely corrected CSA-CSR, with AHI below 10/h. At three months, compliance was comparable between ASV and CPAP; however, at six months compliance with CPAP was significantly less than with ASV. At six months, the improvement in quality of life was higher with ASV and only ASV induced a significant increase in LVEF. Conclusion: These results suggest that patients with CSA-CSR may receive greater benefit from treatment with ASV than with CPAP.
The European Sleep Apnoea Database (ESADA) reflects a network of 22 sleep disorder centres in Europe enabled by a COST action B26 programme. This ongoing project aims to describe differences in ...standard clinical care of patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and to establish a resource for genetic research in this disorder. Patients with suspected OSA are consecutively included and followed up according to local clinical standards. Anthropometrics, medical history, medication, daytime symptoms and sleep data (polysomnography or cardiorespiratory polygraphy) are recorded in a structured web-based report form. 5,103 patients (1,426 females, mean±sd age 51.8±12.6 yrs, 79.4% with apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) ≥5 events·h(-1)) were included from March 15, 2007 to August 1, 2009. Morbid obesity (body mass index ≥35 kg·m(-2)) was present in 21.1% of males and 28.6% of females. Cardiovascular, metabolic and pulmonary comorbidities were frequent (49.1%, 32.9% and 14.2%, respectively). Patients investigated with a polygraphic method had a lower AHI than those undergoing polysomnography (23.2±23.5 versus 29.1±26.3 events·h(-1), p<0.0001). The ESADA is a rapidly growing multicentre patient cohort that enables unique outcome research opportunities and genotyping. The first cross-sectional analysis reveals a high prevalence of cardiovascular and metabolic morbidity in patients investigated for OSA.
Purpose
The aim of the current study was to further investigate the concept of previously reported high occurrence of comorbidities in obstructive sleep patients (OSA) with insomnia-like symptoms. We ...hypothesized that this finding at least partly is mediated by nocturnal hypoxia. Moreover, we speculated that the spectrum of the clinical OSA phenotypes differs between European geographical regions.
Methods
Cohort of the European Sleep Apnea Database (
n
= 17,325; 29.9% females) was divided into five subcohorts according to geographical region (North, East, South, West, Central) and further into four clinical presentation phenotypes based on daytime symptoms (EDS) and characteristics suggestive of insomnia.
Results
The insomnia phenotype (alone or together with EDS) dominated in all European regions. Isolated insomnia, however, was less common in the West. Insomnia phenotype was associated with the highest proportion of cardiovascular comorbidity (51.7% in the insomnia vs. 43.9% in the EDS type). Measures of nocturnal hypoxemia were independently associated with cardiovascular comorbidity in phenotypes with insomnia-like symptoms. The burden of comorbidities was high across all geographical regions and clinical phenotypes. Regional differences were clinically relevant for age (48 vs. 54 years), BMI (29 vs. 34 kg/m
2
), and ODI (15 vs. 32/h).
Conclusion
High prevalence of particularly cardiovascular comorbidity among patients with insomnia-like symptoms was linked to nocturnal hypoxemia. Considerable differences in clinical presentation were found among OSA patients across Europe. Our data underline that physicians should ask their patients with suspected OSA also for insomnia symptoms. It remains to be explored if a reduction of nocturnal hypoxemia predicts the improvement of insomnia symptoms.
Highlights • Four weeks of corticosterone administration (CORT) induces NREM sleep hypersomnia. • CORT decreases wake and REM sleep duration. • CORT decreases sleep/wake continuity and leads to lower ...sleep quality. • Higher emotionality is induced by CORT. • Sleep disorders correlate with anxio/depressive-like behavior traits.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) plays an essential role in neuromuscular transmission, therefore it is surprising that AChE knockout (KO) mice could live to the adulthood. Neuromuscular functioning in KO ...and normal (wild type, WT) mice were studied, at different age (1.5-, 4- and 9-month-old). Hindlimb muscle force productions in response to nerve or muscle electric stimulation were recorded
in situ and
in vitro. Our results show that contrary to WT mice, 1.5-, 4- and 9-month-old KO mice exhibited a decreased in tetanic force during short periods (500
ms) of repetitive nerve stimulations (tetanic fade). Nevertheless submaximal muscle forces in response to single or repetitive nerve stimulation were increased (potentiation) in 1.5-, 4- and 9-month-old KO mice as compared to WT mice (
p
<
0.05). Tetanic fade and potentiation were absent when muscles were directly stimulated, indicating neuromuscular transmission alterations in KO mice. Contrary to younger mice, muscle weight and maximal tetanic force in response to repetitive nerve stimulation were not reduced in 4- and 9-month-old KO mice as compared to WT mice (
p
>
0.05). In conclusion AChE deficit leads to marked neuromuscular alterations in hind limb muscle functioning and a prominent symptom is the lack of resistance to fatigue.
Abstract Prospective clinical trials addressing the role of serotonin (5-HT) in sleep apnea have indicated that the 5-HT uptake inhibitor fluoxetine is beneficial to some patients with obstructive ...apnea, whereas the 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron seems of little value despite its efficacy in rat and dog models of sleep apnea (central and obstructive). Here, we examined the effect of these drugs in transgenic mice lacking monoamine oxidase A (Tg8), which exhibit ∼3-fold higher rates of central sleep apnea than their wild-type counterparts (C3H), linked to their enhanced 5-HT levels. Acute ondansetron (2 mg kg−1 , intraperitoneal), acute fluoxetine (16 mg kg−1 ) and 13-day chronic fluoxetine (1 or 16 mg kg−1 ) decreased by ∼80% the total (spontaneous and post-sigh) apnea index in Tg8 mice during non-rapid eye movement sleep, with no statistically significant effect on apnea in C3H mice. Our study shows that both drugs reduce the frequency of apneic episodes attributable to increased monoamine levels in this model of MAOA deficiency, and suggests that both may be effective in some patients with central sleep apneas.
Continuous positive airway pressure devices are routinely used to treat sleep breathing disorders. Automated devices that adjust the therapeutic pressure have recently been proposed. The utility of ...such devices is still controversial, as rigorous clinical comparisons are difficult to perform as a result of patient and device differences. The current authors studied automated devices in a respiratory model that was able to mimic upper airway mechanics and to interact with pressure adjustment in a closed loop. Five auto-adjusted devices were submitted to this model, in order to determine their ability to detect respiratory events and adjust pressure accordingly. All apnoeas were suppressed, whilst the reaction to repetitive hypopnoeas was dependent on the airflow shape. In some devices, repetitive hypopnoeas were changed to flow limitation. Artificial snoring caused a pressure increase in four devices, and constant mask leak was not systematically compensated. Only one device did not raise pressure in response to central apnoeas with opened upper airways. These findings show that, in some devices, event classification failed and normal airflow was not fully restored, resulting in elevated residual event indices. In conclusion, this model is useful in order to reproducibly compare diagnostic and therapeutic capacities of commercial devices as a first step, before costly clinical studies.
Introduction Respir@dom is an innovative French telemedicine project that combines the automatic transmission of CPAP data with an internet based support programme. Respir@dom aims to improve patient ...observance by combining improved education and support with continually updated data, accessible to both the patient and his health care team, on machine use and patient satisfaction. Materials and methods The Respir@dom platform was developed to harness the power of social media in improving patient education and autonomy. The site acts as a source of high quality information on sleep apnea. This information is accessible to all site visitors. Information is presented not only as text but also in the form of a serious game, in which players learn key messages about sleep apnea and treatment. The site also presents information dedicated to users of continual positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines with videos demonstrating key competences (ex. cleaning a humidificator). Patients can participate in the Respir@dom community, which enables them to exchange information, participate in the forums, create blogs and complete their secure online medical record in which they monitor sleepiness, satisfaction and motivation with their CPAP. Patients randomized to telemonitoring can also access the information automatically transmitted by their CPAP via GPRS in graphic form. An inbuilt algorithm generates alerts which remind the patient to adjust his mask in case of leaks or to increase nightly use. These electronically generated alerts are also transmitted via the medical record to the health care team contact the patient with suggestions if the difficulty continues. Results The Respiradom site http://respiradom.fr, including the serious game, has been created and the community is growing. A cost-efficiency study is underway. 200 patients will be included of whom half will be randomised to telemonitoring and half to normal treatment. Both groups of patients will have access to the Respir@dom site, but only patients randomized to telemonitoring will receive continual monitoring of CPAP indicators and alerts, thus enabling the study to determine which of the elements (site + community vs. telemonitoring) is responsible for changes in CPAP use. Conclusion Respir@dom offers a new approach to improving care of patients treated by CPAP. Acknowledgement Supported by a grant from french governement (DGCIS).