Mandibular advancement device in obstructive sleep apnea treatment: what happens to the condyle position and patient response?

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep and Breathing Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-24 DOI:10.1007/s11325-024-03093-2
Marcela Lima Gurgel, Rowdley Robert Rossi Pereira, Amanda Barbosa Pereira, Cibele Dal Fabbro, Lucio Mitsuo Kurita, Thyciana Rodrigues Ribeiro, Lucia Helena Soares Cevidanes, Fabio Wildson Gurgel Costa, Cauby Maia Chaves Junior
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Abstract

Background: This study aims primarily to assess the mandibular condyles and patient response to MAD therapy using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). Also, the study proposes to analyze whether variations in condylar position, OSA severity and mandibular protrusion influence patient response.

Methods: 23 patients diagnosed with mild/moderate OSA and treated with MAD comprised the sample. Clinical, CBCT, and PSG assessments were conducted at baseline and with MAD in therapeutic protrusion (4-6 months of MAD use). The condyle position was vertically and horizontally evaluated at baseline and at the therapeutic protrusion.

Results: The condyle position significantly changed with MAD, showing anterior (7.3 ± 2.8 mm; p < 0.001) and inferior (3.5 ± 1 mm; p < 0.001) displacement. Patients with mild OSA required more protrusion (p = 0.02) for improvement. Responders exhibited a significantly prominent (p = 0.04) anterior baseline condyle position. A negative modest correlation was found between treatment response and baseline condyle anterior position (p = 0.03; r=-0.4), as well as between OSA severity and the percentage of maximum protrusion needed for therapeutic protrusion (p = 0.02; r=-0.4). The patient protrusion amount did not predict condylar positional changes. Neither condyle position, OSA severity, nor therapeutic protrusion were predictors of MAD treatment response.

Conclusion: MAD resulted in anterior and inferior condylar displacement, and the amount of protrusion did not predict condylar positional changes. Responders showed a more anterior baseline condyle position. OSA severity and mandibular protrusion did not predict treatment response.

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下颌前突矫正器在阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停治疗中的应用:髁突位置和患者反应如何?
背景:本研究的主要目的是使用锥束计算机断层扫描(CBCT)评估下颌骨髁状突和患者对 MAD 治疗的反应。此外,该研究还建议分析髁突位置、OSA 严重程度和下颌前突的变化是否会影响患者的反应。方法:23 名被诊断为轻度/中度 OSA 并接受 MAD 治疗的患者组成样本。临床、CBCT 和 PSG 评估分别在基线和 MAD 治疗性前突(使用 MAD 4-6 个月)时进行。在基线和治疗性突出时,对髁突位置进行垂直和水平评估:结果:髁突位置随着 MAD 的使用发生了明显变化,显示前移(7.3 ± 2.8 mm;p 结论:MAD 使髁突位置前移和后移:MAD导致髁突向前和向下移位,而突出量并不能预测髁突位置的变化。有反应者的髁突基线位置更靠前。OSA 严重程度和下颌前突并不能预测治疗反应。
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来源期刊
Sleep and Breathing
Sleep and Breathing 医学-呼吸系统
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
222
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal Sleep and Breathing aims to reflect the state of the art in the international science and practice of sleep medicine. The journal is based on the recognition that management of sleep disorders requires a multi-disciplinary approach and diverse perspectives. The initial focus of Sleep and Breathing is on timely and original studies that collect, intervene, or otherwise inform all clinicians and scientists in medicine, dentistry and oral surgery, otolaryngology, and epidemiology on the management of the upper airway during sleep. Furthermore, Sleep and Breathing endeavors to bring readers cutting edge information about all evolving aspects of common sleep disorders or disruptions, such as insomnia and shift work. The journal includes not only patient studies, but also studies that emphasize the principles of physiology and pathophysiology or illustrate potentially novel approaches to diagnosis and treatment. In addition, the journal features articles that describe patient-oriented and cost-benefit health outcomes research. Thus, with peer review by an international Editorial Board and prompt English-language publication, Sleep and Breathing provides rapid dissemination of clinical and clinically related scientific information. But it also does more: it is dedicated to making the most important developments in sleep disordered breathing easily accessible to clinicians who are treating sleep apnea by presenting well-chosen, well-written, and highly organized information that is useful for patient care.
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