口腔漏气与鼻用 CPAP 治疗 OSA 期间的睡眠片段有关,可通过漏气波形分析检测到。

Erika Matsumura, Gustavo F Grad, Fernanda Madeiro, Pedro R Genta, Geraldo Lorenzi-Filho
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引用次数: 0

摘要

原因:口腔漏气是阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者对鼻腔 CPAP 依从性低的主要原因。然而,CPAP 报告并未区分口腔漏气和面罩漏气。我们推测,口腔漏气会因睡眠唤醒和闭口而突然终止,这可通过 CPAP 漏气波形分析检测到:描述使用合适的鼻腔 CPAP 治疗的 OSA 患者在多导睡眠图(PSG)中的口腔漏气波形模式:方法:对疑似口腔漏气的使用鼻腔 CPAP 治疗的 OSA 患者进行 PSG 记录,并使用下颌运动传感器检测其张口情况。通过仔细佩戴面罩和目视检查,排除了面罩漏气的可能性。口腔漏气发作的特征是比有意漏气时增加(≥ 20%)。漏气分为间歇性(< 5 分钟)和持续性(≥ 5 分钟):20名患者(80%为男性;年龄:63±11岁;体重指数:29.9±6 kg/m229.9±6 kg/m2;基线呼吸暂停低通气指数:46.9±19 events/h46.9±19事件/小时)完成了研究。除一名患者外,其他所有患者都出现过间歇性和持续性口漏的重叠。大多数口漏发作都是在闭口(97.7%)、唤醒(52.7%)或苏醒(38.6%)后结束。只有 34.9% 的漏气事件与呼吸事件有关。间歇性漏气在 N1+ N2 睡眠阶段更为常见(PConclusions:在使用鼻用 CPAP 时,间歇性和持续性口腔漏气经常并存,并导致睡眠破碎。识别漏气波形模式有助于检测口腔漏气,而口腔漏气又是导致患者不能坚持使用 CPAP 的重要原因。
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Mouth Leak is Associated with Sleep Fragmentation During Nasal CPAP Treatment of OSA and May Be Detected by Leak Waveform Analysis.

Rationale: Mouth air leak is a major cause of low adherence to nasal CPAP in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). However, CPAP reports do not distinguish mouth from mask leak. We hypothesized that mouth air leak is terminated abruptly by an arousal from sleep and mouth closing that can be detected by CPAP leak waveform analysis.

Objective: Describe patterns of mouth air leak waveform during polysomnography (PSG) in patients with OSA treated with well-fitted nasal CPAP.

Methods: PSG recordings with a jaw motion sensor to detect mouth opening were performed in OSA patients treated with nasal CPAP with suspected mouth air leak. Careful mask fitting and visual inspection excluded mask leak. Mouth leak episodes were characterized by an increase (≥ 20%) above the intentional leak. Leak episodes were classified as intermittent (< 5 minutes) or continuous (≥ 5 minutes).

Results: Twenty patients (80% men; age: 63±11 years; body mass index: 29.9±6 kg/m2; baseline apnea hypopnea index: 46.9±19 events/h) treated with nasal CPAP and documented mouth leak completed the study. All but one patient experienced an overlap of intermittent and continuous mouth leak. Most mouth leak episodes ended with mouth closure (97.7%) and an arousal (52.7%) or awakening (38.6%). Only 34.9% of the leak episodes were associated with respiratory events. Intermittent mouth air leak was more common in sleep stages N1+ N2 (P<0.01), while continuous leak was more common in sleep stage N3 (P<0.01). Continuous episodes of air leak were associated with a higher amplitude of mouth opening. CPAP report waveform was able to detect only 29.6% of the leak episodes detected by PSG. Only 10 patients (50%) had a high unintentional leak according to the criterion adopted by ResMed and only 2 patients (10%) presented large leak according to the Philips criterion.

Conclusions: Intermittent and continuous mouth leak during nasal CPAP frequently co-exist and contribute to sleep fragmentation. Identification of leak waveform patterns may help detect mouth air leak which in turn is an important cause of poor CPAP adherence.

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