Control of upper airway muscle activity in younger versus older men during sleep onset
Pharyngeal dilator muscles are clearly important in the pathophysiology of obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSA). We have previously shown that the activity of both the genioglossus (GGEMG) and tensor palatini (TPEMG) are decreased at sleep onset, and that this decrement in muscle activity is grea...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-12, Vol.553 (2), p.533-544 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pharyngeal dilator muscles are clearly important in the pathophysiology of obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSA). We have
previously shown that the activity of both the genioglossus (GGEMG) and tensor palatini (TPEMG) are decreased at sleep onset,
and that this decrement in muscle activity is greater in the apnoea patient than in healthy controls. We have also previously
shown this decrement to be greater in older men when compared with younger ones. In order to explore the mechanisms responsible
for this decrement in muscle activity nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) was applied to reduce negative pressure
mediated muscle activation. We then investigated the effect of sleep onset (transition from predominantly α to predominantly
θ EEG activity) on ventilation, upper airway muscle activation and upper airway resistance (UAR) in middle-aged and younger
healthy men. We found that both GGEMG and TPEMG were reduced by the application of nasal CPAP during wakefulness, but that
CPAP did not alter the decrement in activity in either muscle seen in the first two breaths following an α to θ transition.
However, CPAP prevented both the rise in UAR at sleep onset that occurred on the control night, and the recruitment in GGEMG
seen in the third to fifth breaths following the α to θ transition. Further, GGEMG was higher in the middle-aged men than
in the younger men during wakefulness and was decreased more in the middle-aged men with the application of nasal CPAP. No
differences were seen in TPEMG between the two age groups. These data suggest that the initial sleep onset reduction in upper
airway muscle activity is due to loss of a âwakefulnessâ stimulus, rather than to loss of responsiveness to negative pressure.
In addition, it suggests that in older men, higher wakeful muscle activity is due to an anatomically more collapsible upper
airway with more negative pressure driven muscle activation. Sleep onset per se does not appear to have a greater effect on upper airway muscle activity as one ages. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.045708 |