Tidal volume and stroke volume changes caused by respiratory events during sleep and their relationship with OSA severity: a pilot study
Purpose Breath-by-breath tidal volume (TV) and beat-by-beat stroke volume (SV) were continuously measured in patients with OSA undergoing polysomnography (PSG). The objectives were to (1) determine the changes in TV/SV in response to respiratory events and (2) assess the relationship between these c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sleep & breathing 2021-12, Vol.25 (4), p.2025-2038 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Breath-by-breath tidal volume (TV) and beat-by-beat stroke volume (SV) were continuously measured in patients with OSA undergoing polysomnography (PSG). The objectives were to (1) determine the changes in TV/SV in response to respiratory events and (2) assess the relationship between these changes and the disease severity.
Methods
From the PSG data of nine patients with OSA, six different types of respiratory events were identified, i.e., flow limitation (FL), respiratory effort related arousal (RERA), hypopnea with arousal only (H
a
), hypopnea with desaturation only (H
d
), hypopnea with arousal and desaturation (H
ad
), and apnea. The measured TV and SV values during and after each respiratory event were compared with the pre-event baseline values.
Results
The mean TV/SV reductions during all hypopneas and apneas were 38.1%/4.2% and 70.5%/8.8%, respectively. Among three different hypopnea types, the reductions in TV during H
d
and H
ad
were significantly greater than those during H
a
. The TV reductions during H
a
and FL were similar. After RERA, H
a
, H
ad
, and apnea, there was an overshoot in TV and SV values, whereas there was no overshoot after FL and H
d
. During RERA, there was no reduction in TV/SV.
Conclusions
The changes in TV during and after each type of respiratory event were significantly different in most cases. The changes in SV between hypopnea and apnea were different with statistical significance. The AHI does not properly account for the ventilation losses caused by respiratory events. Thus, TV measurements might be useful in the future in assessing the OSA severity in conjunction with the AHI. |
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ISSN: | 1520-9512 1522-1709 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11325-021-02334-y |