阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停的口腔器械治疗。

Andrew Ng, Helen Gotsopoulos, Ali M Darendeliler, Peter A Cistulli
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引用次数: 53

摘要

阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)是一种常见的睡眠障碍,其特征是睡眠时上呼吸道反复、完全或部分关闭,导致睡眠碎片化和氧饱和度降低。这种疾病会导致严重的发病率,特别是在白天功能受损以及对生活质量的影响方面。也有证据表明,阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停与长期心血管疾病有关,包括高血压、心肌梗死和中风,以及机动车事故风险增加。有明确的证据表明,对阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停的有效治疗对患者有很大的好处。鼻持续气道正压通气(CPAP)是目前的治疗选择,但其繁琐的性质使得耐受性和依从性不理想。这就产生了对其他同样有效但更容易接受的替代方案的需求。人们对使用口腔器械治疗打鼾和呼吸暂停综合症越来越感兴趣。其基本原理是下颌骨和舌头的前移对上呼吸道的口径和功能有积极的影响。有许多这种类型的设备,它们比CPAP具有潜在的优势,因为它们不引人注目,没有噪音,不需要电源,并且可能更便宜。越来越多的证据支持使用口腔辅助器具治疗阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停。最近来自随机对照试验的证据表明,口腔矫治器治疗可有效控制高达50%的OSA患者,包括一些更严重形式的OSA患者。这与症状的显著改善有关,包括打鼾和白天嗜睡。这一证据在短期内是强有力的,并且在使用口腔器械治疗阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停的长期治疗方面正在出现。虽然与CPAP的直接比较表明CPAP总体上具有优势,但在相当一部分患者中,两种治疗方法之间的结果似乎相似。病人的接受程度,一般来说,是赞成口腔用具。尽管口腔矫治器治疗的作用不断扩大,但仍有一些限制有待克服。关键问题包括无法可靠地预测治疗结果,明显需要一段适应期以达到最大的治疗效果,控制个体患者OSA所需下颌推进的适当“剂量”的选择的不确定性,矫治器设计对治疗结果和不良反应的影响的不确定性,坚持治疗的不确定性,以及治疗的潜在长期并发症。在口腔矫治器治疗能够超越CPAP作为OSA的一线治疗之前,这些问题需要得到解决。
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Oral appliance therapy for obstructive sleep apnea.

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common disorder characterized by repetitive, complete or partial closure of the upper airway during sleep, resulting in sleep fragmentation and oxygen desaturation. The disorder causes significant morbidity, particularly in terms of impairment of daytime functioning and the impact this has on quality of life. There is also evidence that links OSA to long-term cardiovascular morbidity, including hypertension, myocardial infarction, and stroke, and increased risk of motor vehicle accidents. There is clear evidence that effective treatment of OSA provides major benefit to patients. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the current treatment of choice, but its cumbersome nature makes tolerance and compliance less than optimal. This gives rise to the need for other alternatives that are equally effective, but more tolerable. There is growing interest in the use of oral appliances to treat snoring and OSA. The rationale is that advancement of the mandible and tongue impacts positively on upper airway caliber and function. There are many such types of appliances, and they have potential advantages over CPAP in that they are unobtrusive, make no noise, do not need a power source, and are potentially less costly. There is a growing evidence base to support the use of oral appliances in the management of OSA. Recent evidence from randomized controlled trials indicates that oral appliance therapy is effective in controlling OSA in up to 50% of patients, including some patients with more severe forms of OSA. This is associated with a significant improvement in symptoms, including snoring and daytime sleepiness. This evidence is strong for short term, and emerging for long-term treatment of OSA with oral appliances. Whilst direct comparisons with CPAP indicate the superiority of CPAP overall, similar outcomes between the two treatments appear to be achieved in a substantial subgroup of patients. Patient acceptance has, in general, been in favor of oral appliances. Notwithstanding the expanding role of oral appliance therapy, there are a number of limitations that are yet to be overcome. Key issues include the inability to reliably predict treatment outcome, the apparent need for an acclimatization period to attain maximal efficacy of treatment, uncertainty about selection of the appropriate 'dosage' of mandibular advancement required to control OSA in the individual patient, uncertainty about the influence of appliance design on treatment outcome and adverse effects, adherence to treatment, and potential long-term complications of therapy. These issues require resolution before oral appliance therapy can surpass CPAP as first-line treatment for OSA.

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