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Sleep in children from northeastern Brazil with congenital Zika syndrome: assessment using polysomnography. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate sleep characteristics in children with congenital Zika syndrome using polysomnography, focusing on respiratory events and neurological classification.
  • Out of 65 children studied, a significant number exhibited sleep apnea (35.4%), desaturation (40%), and snoring (20%), with central apnea being the most common type.
  • Key findings included lower ferritin levels in most children and the presence of specific neuroimaging abnormalities, with no notable difference in apnea occurrence between neuroclinical and neuroradiological classifications.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: We performed this study to describe the characteristics of sleep in children with congenital Zika syndrome through polysomnographic assessment.

Methods: Polysomnography with neurological setup and capnography was performed. Respiratory events were scored according to American Academy of Sleep Medicine criteria. Children were classified based on neuroclinical examination as having corticospinal plus neuromuscular abnormalities or exclusively corticospinal abnormalities. Neuroradiological classification was based on imaging exams, with children classed as having supratentorial plus infratentorial abnormalities or exclusively supratentorial abnormalities.

Results: Of 65 children diagnosed with congenital Zika syndrome, sleep apnea was present in 23 children (35.4%), desaturation in 26 (40%), and snoring in 13 (20%). The most prevalent apnea type was central in 15 children (65.2%), followed by obstructive apnea in 5 (21.7%) and mixed type in 3 (13%). The average of the lowest saturation recorded was slightly below normal (89.1 ± 4.9%) and the mean partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide value was normal. Periodic leg movements were present in 48 of 65 children. Lower ferritin levels were observed in 84.6% of children. Palatine and pharyngeal tonsils (adenoids) were small in most children and not associated with the presence of obstructive apnea. Ventriculomegaly and subcortical and nucleus calcification were the most frequent neuroimaging findings. Supratentorial and infratentorial anomalies were present in 26.7% (16 of 60) and exclusively supratentorial changes in 73.3% (44 of 60). In the neuroclinical classification, isolated corticospinal changes were more frequent and the mean peak in capnography was lower in this group. There was no difference regarding the presence of apnea for children in the neuroclinical and neuroradiological classification groups.

Conclusions: Sleep disorders were frequent in children with congenital Zika syndrome, with central sleep apnea being the main finding.

Citation: Brandão Marquis V, de Oliveira Melo A, Pradella-Hallinan M, et al. Sleep in children from northeastern Brazil with congenital Zika syndrome: assessment using polysomnography. . 2023;19(10):1759-1767.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10545994PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.10674DOI Listing

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