Many changes in the respiratory system occur during pregnancy, particularly during the third trimester, which can alter respiratory function during sleep, increasing the incidence and severity of ...sleep disordered breathing. These changes include increased ventilatory drive and metabolic rate, reduced functional residual capacity and residual volume, increased alveolar-arterial oxygen gradients, and changes in upper airway patency. The clinical importance of these changes is indicated by the increased incidence of snoring during pregnancy, which is likely also to reflect an increased incidence of obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome. For the respiratory physician asked to review a pregnant patient, the possibility of sleep disordered breathing should always be considered. This review first examines the normal physiological changes of pregnancy and their relationship to sleep disordered breathing, and then summarises the current knowledge of sleep disordered breathing in pregnancy.
The association between snoring, nocturnal cough, and allergic symptoms in young children is not known.
To measure the prevalence of habitual snoring and its association with nocturnal cough, asthma, ...and hay fever in preschool children.
A cross-sectional study.
Preschool children aged 2 to 5 years.
The data were collected in a cross-sectional study. A total of 974 children were randomly selected from two areas of Lismore and Wagga Wagga in New South Wales, Australia.
The prevalence of snoring was 10.5%, with no gender difference (p = 0.99) or trend association with age (p = 0.58). The association between snoring and nocturnal cough was highly significant (odds ratio OR, 3.68; 95% confidence interval CI, 2.41 to 5.63; p = 0.001). This association was significant in both the nonasthmatic and asthmatic groups when examined separately. Snoring was also significantly associated with asthma (OR, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.34 to 3.10; p = 0.001). In subjects without hay fever, the association between snoring and asthma was also highly significant (41.2% vs 24.8%; OR, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.34 to 3.37; p = 0.001).
The prevalence of snoring in preschool children was 10.5% for both genders. Snoring was significantly associated with both nocturnal cough and asthma. Because snoring, asthma, and nocturnal cough may have a common etiology, it is possible that effective treatment of one symptom may lead to reductions in the presence or severity of the other symptoms.
The aim of this study was to examine cardiorespiratory control in infants presenting with an apparent life-threatening event (ALTE). We performed six to eight 45 degrees head-up tilts in 10 ALTE ...infants (age, 14 +/- 3 weeks) and 12 age-matched control subjects during slow wave sleep and rapid eye movement sleep (REM). All infants underwent full overnight polygraphic sleep recordings with noninvasive measurement of beat-to-beat blood pressure. All control infants had normal sleep breathing. In contrast, 5 of the 10 ALTE infants had more than two obstructive apneas per hour of sleep, with short hypoxic episodes (obstructive sleep apnea OSA). In slow wave sleep, in response to the tilt, the ALTE infants with OSA showed a reduced heart rate response, and three of the five showed a marked postural hypotension. The ALTE infants with OSA also had altered heart rate and blood pressure variability and an increased arousal threshold in REM (p = 0.0002). By contrast, those ALTE infants with normal sleep breathing had cardiovascular and arousal responses similar to those of the control infants. We conclude that a number of ALTE infants with OSA have abnormal cardiovascular autonomic control that, combined with their decreased arousability in REM, may provide an explanation for the ALTE episodes.
Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) is the most common treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in adults, and it has been effective in the treatment of OSA in children. We wanted to ...determine the effectiveness of long-term nCPAP therapy for OSA in infants.
Twenty-four infants who had OSA were treated with nCPAP via nose mask. These infants had clinical histories that included a family history of sudden infant death syndrome, an apparent life-threatening event, or facial and upper airway anatomic abnormalities.
Overnight polysomnographic studies were performed to assess the severity of OSA in each infant and to determine the appropriate level of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Studies were repeated to determine the progress of OSA and the continuing need for CPAP in each infant.
nCPAP pressures between 4 and 6 cm H2O prevented obstruction and reversed sleep disturbances that were associated with OSA. Eighteen of the infants continued treatment at home from 1 month to > 4 years. CPAP therapy was discontinued in 13 infants after their OSA resolved. Five infants who have upper airway anatomic abnormalities remain on CPAP, and the pressure level required to prevent obstructive events during sleep has needed to be increased to as high as 10 cm H2O.
nCPAP is an effective therapy for the management of OSA in infants, and it can be used effectively in the home environment. Regular follow-up is necessary, because the requirements for CPAP and pressure levels change with the infant's growth and development.
SUMMARY
Major physiological changes occur following parturition and the onset of lactation, including the withdrawal of oestrogen and progesterone, with a consequent increase in circulating prolactin ...(PRL). Changes in other circulating hormones are well known to alter sleep architecture in other circumstances. We therefore aimed to assess whether sleep architecture is altered in fully lactating women as a result of hormonal changes associated with lactation. A descriptive comparison study was undertaken on 12 fully breastfeeding women (B/F), 12 age‐matched control women (CTRL), and seven postnatal women who had chosen to bottle‐feed their infants (BOTTLE). Maternal age, infant age and body mass index (BMI) were similar between all three groups. We performed overnight polysomnography utilizing the Portable Compumedics P‐series. The total sleep time (TST) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep time were similar in the three groups of women. However, B/F women demonstrated a marked increase in slow wave sleep (SWS), 182 ± 41 min compared with CTRL (86 ± 22 min, P < 0.001 compared with B/F) and BOTTLE subjects (63 ± 29 min, P < 0.001 compared with B/F). There was a compensatory reduction in light non‐rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in B/F when compared with CTRL and BOTTLE. The most likely explanation for the altered sleep architecture noted to occur in women who are fully breastfeeding their infants is an increase in circulating PRL, which occurs in lactating women. Enhanced SWS may be another important factor to support breastfeeding in the postnatal period.
We analyzed the polysomnographic records of 15 children and 20 infants with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) to examine the interaction between central and obstructive breathing abnormalities and ...arousal from sleep. Each patient was matched for age with an infant or child who had no OSA. We found that the majority of respiratory events in infants and children was not terminated with arousal. In children, arousals terminated 39.3 +/- 7.2% of respiratory events during quiet sleep and 37.8 +/- 7.2% of events during active (rapid-eye-movement) sleep. In infants, arousals terminated 7.9 +/- 1.0% of events during quiet sleep and 7.9 +/- 1.2% of events during active sleep. In both infants and children, however, respiratory-related arousals occurred more frequently after obstructive apneas and hypopneas than after central events. Spontaneous arousals occurred in all patients with OSA during quiet and active sleep. The frequency of spontaneous arousals was not different between children with OSA and their matched controls. During active sleep, however, infants with OSA had significantly fewer spontaneous arousals than did control infants. We conclude that arousals is not an important mechanism in the termination of respiratory events in infants and children and that electroencephalographic criteria are not essential to determine the clinical severity of OSA in the pediatric population.
Nasal congestion, dry nose and throat, and sore throat affect approximately 40% of patients using nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). The mechanisms causing nasal symptoms are unclear, ...but mouth leaks causing high unidirectional nasal airflow may be important. We conducted a study to investigate the effects of mouth leak and the influence of humidification on nasal resistance in normal subjects. Nasal resistance was measured with posterior rhinomanometry in six normal subjects who deliberately produced a mouth leak for 10 min while using nasal CPAP. Nasal resistance was measured regularly for 20 min after the challenge. A series of tests were performed using air at differing temperatures and humidities. There was no change in nasal resistance when subjects breathed through their noses while on CPAP, but a mouth leak caused a large increase in resistance (at a flow of 0.5 L/s) from a baseline mean of 2.21 cm H2O/L/s to a maximum mean of 7.52 cm H2O/L/s at 1 min after the challenge. Use of a cold passover humidifier caused little change in the response (maximum mean: 8.27 cm H2O/L/s), but a hot water bath humidifier greatly attenuated the magnitude (maximum mean: 4.02 cm H2O/L/s) and duration of the response. Mouth leak with nasal CPAP leads to high unidirectional nasal airflow, which causes a large increase in nasal resistance. This response can be largely prevented by fully humidifying the inspired air.
The mechanisms leading to hypoxemia during sleep in patients with respiratory failure remain poorly understood, with few studies providing a measure of minute ventilation (V I) during sleep. The aim ...of this study was to measure ventilation during sleep in patients with nocturnal desaturation secondary to different respiratory diseases. The 26 patients studied had diagnoses of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n = 9), cystic fibrosis (CF) (n = 2), neuromusculoskeletal disease (n = 4), and obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) (n = 11). Also reported are the results for seven normal subjects and seven patients with effectively treated obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) without desaturation during sleep. Ventilation was measured with a pneumotachograph attached to a nasal mask. In the treated patients with OSA and in the normal subjects, only minor alterations in V I were observed during sleep. In contrast, mean V I for the group with nocturnal desaturation decreased by 21% during non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep and by 39% during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep as compared with wakefulness. This reduction was due mainly to a decrease in tidal volume (V T). Hypoventilation was most pronounced during REM sleep, irrespective of the underlying disease. These data indicate that hypoventilation may be the major factor leading to hypoxia during sleep, and that reversal of hypoventilation during sleep should be a major therapeutic strategy for these patients.
To examine the utility of four methods used to detect increased upper airway resistance leading to arousal from sleep.
Ten overnight sleep studies were conducted on normal subjects who reported ...increased snoring and/or witnessed apneas following alcohol ingestion. Alcohol was used to increase upper airway resistance in these normal subjects before ovemight polysomnography. Four methods to detect the presence of increased upper airway resistance were used: esophageal pressure manometry; respiratory inductive plethysmography; a piezoelectrically treated stretch sensor adhered to the supraclavicular fossa; nasal flow measured with oxygen cannula and differential pressure transducer.
Private Sleep Laboratory.
Ten normal, healthy volunteers (5 male, 5 female).
Alcohol ingestion as red wine (14% alcohol), 180-540 mL one to two hours before overnight polysomnography. Esophageal catheterisation.
Two hundred twenty-seven electroencephalogram arousals were preceded by inspiratory flow limitation and/or increased respiratory effort. Flattening of the nasal flow profile preceded all 227 arousals. In contrast, only 40% of arousals were preceded by an increase in the size of the stretch sensor signal, 22% by more-negative deflection of the esophageal pressure signal and 21% by increase in the signal size of respiratory inductance plethysmography.
These findings indicate that the most reliable method of detecting increased upper airway resistance leading to arousal from sleep is the nasal cannula/pressure transducer method and suggest that many arousals induced by increased upper airway resistance may be caused by mechanoreceptor afferents.
We measured ventilation in all sleep stages in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and moderate to severe lung disease, and compared the effects of low-flow oxygen (LFO2) and bilevel ventilatory ...support (BVS) on ventilation and gas exchange during sleep. Thirteen subjects, age 26 +/- 5.9 yr (mean +/- 1 SD), body mass index (BMI) 20 +/- 3 kg/m2, FEV1 32 +/- 11% predicted, underwent three sleep studies breathing, in random order, room air (RA), LFO2, and BVS +/- O2 with recording of oxyhemoglobin saturation (SpO2) (%) and transcutaneous carbon dioxide (TcCO2) (mm Hg). During RA and LFO2 studies, patients wore a nasal mask with a baseline continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) of 4 to 5 cm H2O. Minute ventilation (V I) was measured using a pneumotachograph in the circuit and was not different between wake and non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep on any night. However, V I was reduced on the RA and LFO2 nights from awake to rapid eye movement (REM) (p < 0.01) and from NREM to REM (p < 0.01). On the BVS night there was no significant difference in V I between NREM and REM sleep. Both BVS and LFO2 improved nocturnal SpO2, especially during REM sleep (p < 0.05). The rise in TcCO2 seen with REM sleep with both RA and LFO2 was attenuated with BVS (p < 0.05). We conclude that BVS leads to improvements in alveolar ventilation during sleep in this patient group.