Sleep-related breathing disorders Flashcards
What are hypoventilation syndromes?
- primary alveolar hypoventilation: idiopathic
- obesity-hypoventilation syndrome (Pickwickian syndrome)
- respiratory neuromuscular disorders
What is Pickwickian syndrome?
obesity-hypoventilation syndrome
What is sleep apnoea?
• episodic decreases in airflow during sleep
• quantitatively measured by the Apnea/Hypopnea Index (AHI) = # of apneic and hypopneic
events per hour of sleep
• sleep apnea generally accepted to be present if AHI >15
How is breathing different during sleep?
• Tidal volume decreases
• Arterial CO2 increases (due to decreased minute ventilation)
• Pharyngeal dilator muscles relax
causing increased upper airway resistance
What is apnoea & hypopnea?
Apnea: absence of breathing for ≥10 s.
Hypopnea: excessive decrease in rate or depth of breathing (>50% reduction in ventilation).
What are the (3) classifications of sleep apnoea?
- obstructive (temporary obstruction of upper airway)
- central (temporary decrease in CNS drive to breathe)
- mixed (features of both OSA + CSA)
Describe obstructive sleep apnoea
- caused by transient, episodic obstruction of the upper airway
- absent or reduced airflow despite persistent respiratory effort
- due to: obesity, upper airway abnormality, neuromuscular disease, hypothyroidism,
alcohol/sedative use, nasal congestion, sleep deprivation
Describe central sleep apnoea
- caused by transient, episodic decreases in CNS drive to breathe
- no airflow because no respiratory effort
- Cheyne-Stokes Respiration
What is Cheyne-Stokes respiration?
a form of CSA in which central apneas alternate with hyperpneas to produce a crescendo-decrescendo pattern of tidal volume; seen in severe LV dysfunction, brain injury, and other settings
Describe mixed sleep apnoea
- features of both OSA and CSA
- loss of hypoxic and hypercapnic drives to breathe secondary to “resuscitative breathing”:
overcompensatory hyperventilation upon awakening from OSA induced hypoxia
Px of sleep apnoea
• obtain history from spouse/partner
• secondary to repeated arousals and fragmentation of sleep: daytime somnolence, personality
and cognitive changes, snoring
• secondary to hypoxemia and hypercapnia: morning headache, polycythemia, pulmonary/
systemic HTN, cor pulmonale/CHF, nocturnal angina, arrhythmias
• the typical presentation for OSA is a middle-aged obese male who snores
• CSA can be due to neurological disease
What are the indications for a sleep study (polysomnography)?
- excessive daytime sleepiness
- unexplained pulmonary HTN or polycythemia
- daytime hypercapnia
- titration of optimal nasal CPAP - assessment of objective response to other interventions
Rx of sleep apnoea
• modifiable factors: weight loss, decreased alcohol/sedatives, nasal decongestion, treatment of
underlying medical conditions
• OSA or MSA: nasal CPAP, postural therapy (i.e. no supine sleeping), dental appliance,
uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, tonsillectomy
• CSA or hypoventilation syndromes: nasal BiPAP/CPAP, respiratory stimulants (e.g. progesterone) in select cases
• tracheostomy rarely required and should be used as last resort for OSA
Cx of sleep apnoea
depression, weight gain, decreased quality of life, workplace and vehicular accidents, cardiac
complications (e.g. HTN), reduced work/social function
How is CPAP beneficial in OSA?
- reduce CV risk
- reduce CV related deaths