Mechanisms used to restore ventilation after partial upper airway collapse during sleep in humans
- 1 October 2007
- Vol. 62 (10) , 861-867
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.2006.070300
Abstract
Most patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) can restore airflow after an obstructive respiratory event without arousal at least some of the time. The mechanisms that enable this ventilatory recovery are unclear but probably include increased upper airway dilator muscle activity and/or changes in respiratory timing. The aims of this study were to compare the ability to recover ventilation and the mechanisms of compensation following a sudden reduction of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in subjects with and without OSA. Ten obese patients with OSA (mean (SD) apnoea-hypopnoea index 62.6 (12.4) events/h) and 15 healthy non-obese non-snorers were instrumented with intramuscular genioglossus electrodes and a mask/pneumotachograph which was connected to a modified CPAP device that could deliver either continuous positive or negative pressure. During stable non-rapid eye movement sleep the CPAP was repeatedly reduced 2-10 cm H2O below the level required to eliminate flow limitation and was held at this level for 5 min or until arousal from sleep occurred. During reduced CPAP the increases in genioglossus activity (311.5 (49.4)% of baseline in subjects with OSA and 315.4 (76.2)% of baseline in non-snorers, p = 0.9) and duty cycle (123.8 (3.9)% of baseline in subjects with OSA and 118.2 (2.8)% of baseline in non-snorers, p = 0.4) were similar in both groups, yet patients with OSA could restore ventilation without cortical arousal less often than non-snorers (54.1% vs 65.7% of pressure drops, p = 0.04). When ventilatory recovery did not occur, genioglossus muscle and respiratory timing changes still occurred but these did not yield adequate pharyngeal patency/ventilation. Compensatory mechanisms (increased genioglossus muscle activity and/or duty cycle) often restore ventilation during sleep but may be less effective in obese patients with OSA than in non-snorers.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genioglossal Muscle Response to CO2 Stimulation During NREM SleepSleep, 2006
- The influence of gender and upper airway resistance on the ventilatory response to arousal in obstructive sleep apnoea in humansThe Journal of Physiology, 2004
- Role of Arousals in the Pathogenesis of Obstructive Sleep ApneaAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2004
- The Influence of Lung Volume on Pharyngeal Mechanics, Collapsibility, and Genioglossus Muscle Activation during SleepSleep, 2003
- On the nature of cardiovascular activation at an arousal from sleep.Sleep, 2003
- Hypercapnic duty cycle is an intermediate physiological phenotype linked to mouse chromosome 5Journal of Applied Physiology, 2003
- The length–force relationship of the human genioglossus in patients with obstructive sleep apneaRespiratory Physiology & Neurobiology, 2002
- Genioglossus Muscle Responsiveness to Chemical and Mechanical Stimuli during Non–Rapid Eye Movement SleepAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2002
- EEG arousals: scoring rules and examples: a preliminary report from the Sleep Disorders Atlas Task Force of the American Sleep Disorders Association.1992
- PATHOGENESIS OF APNEAS IN HYPERSOMNIA-SLEEP APNEA SYNDROMEPublished by Elsevier ,1982