A Portable Automated Assessment Tool for Sleep Apnea Using a Combined Holter-Oximeter
Resource limitations have raised interest in portable monitoring systems that can be used by specialist sleep physicians as part of an overall strategy to improve access to the diagnosis of sleep apnea. This study validates a combined electrocardiogram and oximetry recorder (Holter-oximeter) against...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sleep (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2008-10, Vol.31 (10), p.1432-1439 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Resource limitations have raised interest in portable monitoring systems that can be used by specialist sleep physicians as part of an overall strategy to improve access to the diagnosis of sleep apnea. This study validates a combined electrocardiogram and oximetry recorder (Holter-oximeter) against simultaneous polysomnography for detection of sleep apnea.
Prospective study.
A dedicated sleep disorders unit.
59 adults presenting for evaluation of suspected sleep apnea.
NA.
An automated algorithm previously developed for sleep apnea detection was applied to the electrocardiogram and oximetry measurements. The algorithm provides (a) epoch-by-epoch estimates of apnea occurrence and (b) estimates of overall per-subject AHI. Using separate thresholds of AHI > or =15 and AHI 20 and 0.04 respectively, with 16.7% of subjects having intermediate test results (AHI 5-14/h). Regardless ofAHI, 85.3% of respiratory events were correctly annotated on an epoch-by-epoch basis. AHI underestimation bias was 0.9/h, and the antilogs of log-transformed limits of agreement were 0.3 and 2.7. Correlation between estimated and reference AHI was 0.95 (P |
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ISSN: | 0161-8105 1550-9109 1550-9109 |
DOI: | 10.5665/sleep/31.10.1432 |