36 research outputs found

    Current treatment of comorbid insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea with CBTI and PAP-therapy : a systematic review

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    Insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are often both present in patients with sleep- disordered-breathing. The coexistence of the two disorders shows an increase in cumulative morbidity and an overall greater illness severity. There is still considerable controversy regarding management decisions in this group of patients. This systematic review focused on more recent evidence regarding treatment of patients presenting with both clinical entities of comorbid insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea in terms of their management, especially using combinations of positive airway pressure (PAP, namely aPAP, cPAP, adaptive servo-ventilation[ASV]) and CBTi as well as each one of these two modalities alone. As a conclusion it is necessary to specifically target distinct combinations of both insomnia (initial, middle, late) and OSA (mild, moderate, severe) phenotypes. The present review gives reason to assume that both CBTi and PAP-therapy are necessary. However, it appears that distinct treatment patterns may suit different COMISA phenotypes

    Heart rate variability as a surrogate marker of severe chronic coronary syndrome in patients with obstructive sleep apnea

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    Background and Objectives: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a known risk factor for chronic coronary syndrome (CCS). CCS and OSA are separately associated with significant changes in heart rate variability (HRV). In this proof-of-concept study, we tested whether HRV values are significantly different between OSA patients with concomitant severe CCS, and OSA patients without known CCS. Material and Methods: The study comprised a retrospective assessment of the historical and raw polysomnography (PSG) data of 32 patients who presented to a tertiary university hospital with clinical complaints of OSA. A total of 16 patients (four females, mean age 62.94 ± 2.74 years, mean body mass index (BMI) 31.93 ± 1.65 kg/m2) with OSA (median apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) 39.1 (30.5–70.6)/h) and severe CCS were compared to 16 patients (four females, mean age 62.35 ± 2.06 years, mean BMI 32.19 ± 1.07 kg/m2) with OSA (median AHI 40 (30.6–44.5)/h) but without severe CCS. The short–long-term HRV (in msec) was calculated based on the data of a single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) provided by one full-night PSG, using the standard deviation of the NN, normal-to-normal intervals (SDNN) and the heart rate variability triangular index (HRVI) methods, and compared between the two groups. Results: A significant reduction (p < 0.05) in both SDNN and HRVI was found in the OSA group with CCS compared to the OSA group without CCS. Conclusions: Severe CCS has a significant impact on short–long-term HRV in OSA patients. Further studies in OSA patients with less-severe CCS may shed more light onto the involved mechanistic processes. If confirmed in future larger studies, this physiologic metric has the potential to provide a robust surrogate marker of severe CCS in OSA patients

    Intensity of respiratory cortical arousals is a distinct pathophysiologic feature and is associated with disease severity in obstructive sleep apnea patients

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    Background: We investigated whether the number, duration and intensity of respiratory arousals (RA) on C3-electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings correlate with polysomnography (PSG)-related disease severity in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients. We also investigated if every patient might have an individual RA microstructure pattern, independent from OSA-severity. Methods: PSG recordings of 20 OSA patients (9 female; age 27–80 years) were analyzed retrospectively. Correlation coefficients were calculated between RA microstructure (duration, EEG-intensity) and RA number and respiratory disturbance index (RDI), oxygen desaturation index (ODI) and arousal index (AI). Intraclass correlations (ICC) for both RA duration and intensity were calculated. Sleep stage-specific and apnea- and hypopnea-specific analyses were also done. The probability distributions of duration and intensity were plotted, interpolated with a kernel which fits the distribution. A Bayesian posterior distribution analysis and pair-wise comparisons of each patient with all other 19 patients were performed. Results: Of the analyzed 2600 RA, strong positive correlations were found between average RA intensity and both RDI and AI. The number of PSG-recorded RA was strongly positively correlated with RDI. Significant correlations between average RA intensity in REM, NREM2 and NREM3 sleep stages and total ODI were identified. No sleep stage-specific correlations of arousal microstructure with age, sex, RDI or AI were identified. Although between-subjects ICC values were 0.7 (all p < 0.05). While apnea-related RA duration did not differ from hypopnea-related RA duration, RA intensity was significantly higher (p = 0.00135) in hypopneas than in apneas. A clear individual pattern of arousal duration for each patient was made distinct. For arousal intensity, a Gaussian distribution was identified in most patients. The Bayesian statistics regarding the arousal microstructure showed significant differences between each pair of patients. Conclusions: Each individual patient with OSA might have an individual pattern of RA intensity and duration indicating a distinct individual pathophysiological feature. Arousal intensity was significantly higher in hypopneic than in apneic events and may be related causally to the diminished (compared to apneas) respiratory distress associated with hypopneas. RA intensity in REM, NREM2 and NREM3 strongly correlated with ODI

    Corticoperipheral neuromuscular disconnection in obstructive sleep apnoea

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    The roles of central nervous mechanisms and cortical output in obstructive sleep apnea remain unclear. We addressed corticomuscular coupling between cortical sensorimotor areas and lower facial motor units as a mechanistic pathway and as a possible surrogate marker of cortico-peripheral motor control in obstructive sleep apnea. In this exploratory cross-sectional retrospective study we analysed EEG (C3- and C4-leads) and chin EMG from polysomnography recordings in 86 participants (22 females; age range: 26-81 years), 27 with mild (respiratory disturbance index = 5-15 events/hour), 21 with moderate (15-30 events/h) and 23 with severe obstructive sleep apnea (> 30 events/h) and 15 control subjects (<5 events/h). By computing C3-/C4-EEG- chin EMG coherence of signal dynamics in time and frequency domains we investigated corticomuscular coupling between cortical sensorimotor areas and lower facial motor units with increasing obstructive sleep apnea severity during the entire sleeping time, during different sleep stages and during obstructive respiratory events, including 5 seconds before (stable breathing) and after events (breathing resumption). Additionally, we studied a possible influence of body-mass-index and autonomic nervous system activation. We found that both average and respiratory event-specific corticomuscular coupling between cortical sensorimotor areas and lower facial motor units weakened significantly with increasing obstructive sleep apnea severity, was strongest during N3 and weakened in N1, N2 and rapid-eye-movement stages (in decreasing order). Coupling increases significantly during the obstructive respiratory events compared with coupling just before and following them. Results were independent of body-mass-index or autonomic nervous system activation. We conclude that obstructive respiratory events in obstructive sleep apnea are very strongly associated both quantitatively and temporally with the degree of disconnection within the cortical sensorimotor areas - lower facial motor units pathway. This quite coordinated activity pattern suggests a cortical sensorimotor area-driven obstructive respiratory event pattern generator and a central motor output disorder in obstructive sleep apnea

    An AI-supported diagnostic tool for obstructive sleep apnea patients based on delta-alpha connectivity at the sensorimotor cortex [Abstract]

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    Background: The modulation of delta-alpha phase-amplitude cross-frequency coupling (PACFC) may influence information processing throughout the human cerebral cortex. We investigated whether this frequency band-specific modulation is impaired in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Patients & Methods: In this study, the C3- and C4- electroencephalographic recordings of 170 participants (86 in main dataset: age 27-84 years, 44 subjects had moderate or severe OSA with respiratory disturbance index RDI>15/h; 84 in validation dataset: age 35 -75 years, 42 subjects with RDI>15/h) who underwent full-night polysomnography (PSG) were evaluated. We tested if the delta-alpha PACFC modulation index (MI) at the sensorimotor cortex differs between OSA patients with RDI>15/h and those with RDI≤15/h in distinct sleep stages. Further, by making use of a Support Vector Machine (SVM) algorithm, we tested if the sleep stage – specific MIs could predict RDI values of OSA patients. Results: In both datasets, in OSA patients with RDI >15/h, the delta-alpha CFC-MI was significantly (p< 0.05) reduced at the sensorimotor cortex during REM and NREM1 stages, while increased during NREM2 compared to patients with RDI ≤15/h. In addition, the delta-alpha MI in REM sleep stage could provide with use of an SVM algorithm a quite reliable (82% accuracy) prediction of the RDI in OSA patients. Conclusions: This increase in disconnection at the cortical sensorimotor areas with increasing respiratory distress during sleep further supports the concept of a cortical sensorimotor dysfunction in OSA patients. Additionally, the delta – alpha MI during REM sleep may provide an objective neurophysiologic surrogate marker of respiratory distress in OSA patients

    Medical and Dental Students' Perception of Interdisciplinary Knowledge, Teaching Content, and Interprofessional Status at a German University: A Cross-Sectional Study.

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    Although oral health is considered a key indicator of overall health, dentistry is still neglected in medical education at the university level. Interprofessional education (IPE) is an important tool to promote collaboration among health care providers and to reduce barriers to access in health care. In this cross-sectional study, medical and dental students at Mainz University, Germany, were surveyed regarding their perception of interdisciplinary knowledge, teaching content, interprofessional standing, and attitudes toward IPE. Spearman's rank correlation was used to identify associated statements. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was performed to understand how sex, study progress, and prior education might influence student attitudes. In total, 426 medical students and 211 dental students were included in the study. Dental students rated their interdisciplinary knowledge higher than medical students. The relevance of IPE as assessed by the students correlated significantly with their motivation to continue IPE after graduation. Both groups of students valued the other discipline but rejected a combined graduate program. Students with prior professional training valued the synergy of medicine and dentistry more the students without prior training. Interprofessional knowledge and interest in IPE was higher among dental students. Understanding students' attitudes toward IPE is an important prerequisite for adapting university curricula to strengthen students' attitudes and motivation

    KI-gestützte Diagnostik der obstruktiven Schlafapnoe mittels delta – alpha Konnektivität am sensorimotorischen Cortex [Abstract]

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    Fragestellung: Die Modulation der delta-alpha Phasenamplituden-Kreuzfrequenzkopplung (PAKFK) kann die cerebro-corticale Informationsverarbeitung beeinflussen. Wir haben untersucht, ob diese frequenzband-spezifische Modulation bei Patienten mit obstruktiver Schlafapnoe (OSA) beeinträchtigt wird. Patienten und Methoden: Es wurden die C3- und C4- elektroencephalographischen Aufnahmen der Polysomnographien von 170 Teilnehmern (86 im Hauptdatensatz, 27 - 84 Jahre alt, 44 Teilnehmer mit Respiratorischen Disturbance Index RDI>15/h und 84 im Validierungsdatensatz, 35 - 75 Jahre alt, 42 davon mit RDI>15/h) ausgewertet. Der delta-alpha KFK-Modulationsindex (MI) wurde bei Patienten mit unterschiedlichem OSA-Schweregrad in den unterschiedlichen Schlafstadien am sensorimotorischen Cortex berechnet. Auch die Möglichkeit der Vorhersage des RDI mit Hilfe der Schlafstadien-spezifischen MIs unter Verwendung eines Support Vector Machine (SVM) - Algorithmus wurde getestet. Ergebnisse: In beiden Datensätzen wurde der delta-alpha KFK-MI an den kortikalen sensorimotorischen Bereichen bei Patienten mit RDI>15/h im Vergleich zu Patienten mit RDI≤15/h im Stadium NREM1 und REM signifikant (p15/h signifikant erhöht im Vergleich zu Patienten mit RDI≤15/h. Delta-alpha MI im REM-Stadium konnte mittels SVM zuverlässig (82% Genauigkeit) den RDI vorhersagen. Schlussfolgerungen: Diese Frequenzband- und Schlafstadien-spezifische sensorimotorische Diskonnektion unterstützt das Konzept einer kortikalen sensorimotorischen Dysfunktion bei OSA-Patienten. Zudem, bietet der delta-alpha MI im REM–Schlaf einen potenziellen objektiven neurophysiologischen Ersatzmarker der respiratorischen Störung bei OSA-Patienten an

    The role of structured reporting and structured operation planning in functional endoscopic sinus surgery

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    Computed tomography (CT) scans represent the gold standard in the planning of functional endoscopic sinus surgeries (FESS). Yet, radiologists and otolaryngologists have different perspectives on these scans. In general, residents often struggle with aspects involved in both reporting and operation planning. The aim of this study was to compare the completeness of structured reports (SR) of preoperative CT images and structured operation planning (SOP) to conventional reports (CR) and conventional operation planning (COP) to potentially improve future treatment decisions on an individual level. In total, 30 preoperative CT scans obtained for surgical planning of patients scheduled for FESS were evaluated using SR and CR by radiology residents. Subsequently, otolaryngology residents performed a COP using free texts and a SOP using a specific template. All radiology reports and operation plannings were evaluated by two experienced FESS surgeons regarding their completeness for surgical planning. User satisfaction of otolaryngology residents was assessed by using visual analogue scales. Overall radiology report completeness was significantly higher using SRs regarding surgically important structures compared to CRs (84.4 vs. 22.0%, p<0.001). SOPs produced significantly higher completeness ratings (97% vs. 39.4%, p<0.001) regarding pathologies and anatomical variances. Moreover, time efficiency was not significantly impaired by implementation of SR (148 s vs. 160 s, p = 0.61) and user satisfaction was significantly higher for SOP (VAS 8.1 vs. 4.1, p<0.001). Implementation of SR and SOP results in a significantly increased completeness of radiology reports and operation planning for FESS. Consequently, the combination of both facilitates surgical planning and may decrease potential risks during FESS

    Management of obstructive sleep apnea in Europe – A 10-year follow-up

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    Funding Information: Sleep medicine has been further established and recognized in the past 10 years. This is also shown by the fact that sleep-related diseases may receive a separate chapter in the new ICD-11 (International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision) [11]. However, the initial expansion in sleep laboratories and sleep centers seems to be over, at least in Europe, which stands in contradiction to the growing need. While sleep medical care still seems to be secured by the established structures, the gap between the increasing need and existing structures is still widening [ 12–14]. There is a lack of sleep medicine specialists, new outpatient structures, and new billing models with the sponsoring institutions. Approaches to solve these problems include the establishment and expansion of home sleep apnea testing (HSAT) [15] and telemedicine-based technologies in the diagnosis and treatment of OSA [16,17]. Telemedicine found its way into sleep medicine around 10 years ago [ 18–20]. One of the very first approaches as early as 1994 used a telephone circuit and a computer-controlled support system to improve OSA treatment by improving lifestyle through tele-guidance on nutrition and exercise [21]. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Objective: In 2010, a questionnaire-based study on obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) management in Europe identified differences regarding reimbursement, sleep specialist qualification, and titration procedures. Now, 10 years later, a follow-up study was conducted as part of the ESADA (European Sleep Apnea Database) network to explore the development of OSA management over time. Methods: The 2010 questionnaire including questions on sleep diagnostic, reimbursement, treatment, and certification was updated with questions on telemedicine and distributed to European Sleep Centers to reflect European OSA management practice. Results: 26 countries (36 sleep centers) participated, representing 20 ESADA and 6 non-ESADA countries. All 21 countries from the 2010 survey participated. In 2010, OSA diagnostic procedures were performed mainly by specialized physicians (86%), whereas now mainly by certified sleep specialists and specialized physicians (69%). Treatment and titration procedures are currently quite homogenous, with a strong trend towards more Autotitrating Positive Airway Pressure treatment (in hospital 73%, at home 62%). From 2010 to 2020, home sleep apnea testing use increased (76%–89%) and polysomnography as sole diagnostic procedure decreased (24%–12%). Availability of a sleep specialist qualification increased (52%–65%) as well as the number of certified polysomnography scorers (certified physicians: 36%–79%; certified technicians: 20%–62%). Telemedicine, not surveyed in 2010, is now in 2020 used in diagnostics (8%), treatment (50%), and follow-up (73%). Conclusion: In the past decade, formal qualification of sleep center personnel increased, OSA diagnostic and treatment procedures shifted towards a more automatic approach, and telemedicine became more prominent.Peer reviewe
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