Measurement of sleep-related breathing disturbances in epidemiologic studies. Assessment of the validity and reproducibility of a portable monitoring device
The feasibility and reliability of measuring sleep-related breathing disorders with a portable monitor (PM) were assessed in a heterogeneous population, consisting of 31 patients recruited from a sleep laboratory and pulmonary disease clinic, 16 participants in a genetic-epidemiologic study of sleep...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chest 1991-11, Vol.100 (5), p.1281-1286 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The feasibility and reliability of measuring sleep-related breathing disorders with a portable monitor (PM) were assessed
in a heterogeneous population, consisting of 31 patients recruited from a sleep laboratory and pulmonary disease clinic, 16
participants in a genetic-epidemiologic study of sleep apnea, and four volunteers with no specific sleep complaints. The validity
of measurements made by the PM was assessed with comparisons of respiratory parameters made with the PM to those determined
with in-hospital polysomnography (PSG) (25 studies). Reproducibility was assessed in 29 subjects who underwent in-home monitoring
on two occasions. There was a high level of agreement between the number of respiratory events (apneas or hypopneas) per hour
of estimated sleep (respiratory disturbance index, RDI) recorded with the PM and PSG and log-transformed (r = 0.96). Using
a RDI of greater than or equal to 10 to define "abnormality," 20 of the 21 subjects who would have been classified as abnormal
with PSG were classified similarly with use of the PM. A similar high level of agreement was demonstrated for the log-transformed
RDI determined with replicate in-home studies (r = 0.94). No evidence of a "first-night effect" for the RDI was suggested
in studies performed with the PM; ie, RDI was 18.4 +/- 27.7 and 17.4 +/- 25.7 (mean +/- SD) for first and second night studies,
respectively (p = 0.21). A second compared with an initial study with the PM would have resulted in reclassification of abnormality
based on an RDI of greater than or equal to 10 in one subject. These findings suggest that measurement of the RDI with in-home
monitoring provides a valid and highly reproducible index for assessment of sleep-related respiratory disturbances for use
in epidemiologic studies of general populations. |
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ISSN: | 0012-3692 1931-3543 |
DOI: | 10.1378/chest.100.5.1281 |