Treatment-emergent central sleep apnea resolves with lower inspiratory pressure.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine Pub Date : 2025-03-01 DOI:10.5664/jcsm.11492
William H Noah, Ludovico Messineo, Bernard Hete, Evelyn Thompson, David P White, Robert J Farney, Krishna M Sundar
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Abstract

Study objectives: Treatment-emergent central sleep apnea (TECSA) is an important problem during therapy with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. We tested a device designed to improve CPAP comfort through reducing inspiratory positive airway pressure (IPAP; V˙-Com) to determine whether such a reduction in IPAP could eliminate central apneas in patients with TECSA. Because increasing tidal volume (potentially via IPAP increments) has been suggested as a possible mechanism contributing to TECSA onset, our hypothesis was that reducing IPAP would yield a drop in the central apnea index.

Methods: The addition of a known resistance (V˙-Com device) that reduces IPAP was implemented into the CPAP circuit during the second half of CPAP titrations in a cohort of community-dwelling patients who developed TECSA during a split-night CPAP titration. Central apnea index was quantified from the sleep periods without and with V˙-Com in place.

Results: A total of 1,613 patients underwent CPAP titration, with 19 of them developing TECSA during the titration. The addition of V˙-Com resulted in complete resolution of TECSA in all patients with adequate sleep data under all conditions (n = 13), yielding a significant reduction in the central apnea index (17.3 ± 11.0 vs 1.5 ± 1.7 events/h without and with V˙-Com, respectively; P < .001).

Conclusions: V˙-Com virtually resolved all instances of TECSA, suggesting that reducing IPAP could be an effective strategy for managing the occurrence of central respiratory events in patients with obstructive sleep apnea using CPAP.

Citation: Noah WH, Messineo L, Hete B, et al. Treatment-emergent central sleep apnea resolves with lower inspiratory pressure. J Clin Sleep Med. 2025;21(3):559-564.

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治疗:出现的中枢性睡眠呼吸暂停随着吸气压力降低而缓解。
研究目的:紧急中央性睡眠呼吸暂停(TECSA)的治疗是阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者持续气道正压通气(CPAP)治疗中的一个重要问题。在这里,我们测试了一种旨在通过降低IPAP (V˙-Com)来改善CPAP舒适度的装置,以确定这种IPAP降低是否可以消除TECSA患者的中枢呼吸暂停。由于潮汐量的增加(可能通过IPAP的增加)被认为是导致TECSA发病的可能机制,我们的假设是减少IPAP会导致中央呼吸暂停指数(CAI)的下降。方法:在CPAP滴定的后半段,在一组在分夜CPAP滴定期间发生TECSA的社区居民患者中,在CPAP电路中加入一个已知电阻(V˙com装置)来降低IPAP。通过无V˙com和有V˙com的睡眠时间来量化CAI。结果:1613例患者行CPAP滴定,其中19例在滴定过程中发生TECSA。在所有睡眠数据充足的患者(N=13)中,V˙˙com的添加导致TECSA完全消退,导致CAI显著降低(分别为17.3±11.0 vs. 1.5±1.7事件/小时,无V˙com和有V˙com的患者)。结论:V˙com实际上解决了所有TECSA病例,表明减少IPAP可能是管理使用CPAP的OSA患者中枢呼吸事件发生的有效策略。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
7.00%
发文量
321
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine focuses on clinical sleep medicine. Its emphasis is publication of papers with direct applicability and/or relevance to the clinical practice of sleep medicine. This includes clinical trials, clinical reviews, clinical commentary and debate, medical economic/practice perspectives, case series and novel/interesting case reports. In addition, the journal will publish proceedings from conferences, workshops and symposia sponsored by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine or other organizations related to improving the practice of sleep medicine.
期刊最新文献
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