Normal and obstructive breathing physiology during sleep.

Sleep Breath

Fachkrankenhaus Kloster Grafschaft GmbH, Annostr. 1, 57392, Schmallenberg, Germany.

Published: September 2021

Purpose: To estimate the severity of flow limitation in patients with OSA, the number of breaths with flattened inspiratory flow curves should be identified. Attempts to do a quantitative analysis of the flattening degree for all breaths in a nighttime recording have failed up to now.

Methods: SOMNOmedics (Randersacker, Germany) developed an automated flattening analysis parameter called the obstructive coefficient (OC). Polysomnographic measurement including esophageal manometry was done in 25 subjects (10 healthy, 9 patients with mild OSA, and 6 with severe OSA). For each breath, the data couple of OC and esophageal pressure (EP) was used for analysis.

Results: Data couples of OC and EP were recorded for 104,608 breaths. Airway patency histogram profiles for each study group showed no remarkable differences between each other. Increase in EP with increasing RDI was identified as the only marker of OSA severity. A strong shift was observed in N3 breaths from maximum OC/lowest EP values in healthy subjects to low OC values in association with maximum EP values in OSA.

Conclusion: The OC enables quantification of all breaths of a nighttime recording according to their degree of flattening. The relation of strong limited to less strong limited breaths is the same across the three study groups. The analysis of the corresponding EP to a given OC value for each study group identified the EP that is necessary to cause a given flow as the only parameter that discriminates degrees of severity of OSA. The trial registration number is DRKS00018095 from 2019 to 10-09.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11325-020-02217-8DOI Listing

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