Title
Adaptive Servoventilation as Treatment for Central Sleep Apnea Due to High-Altitude Periodic Breathing in Nonacclimatized Healthy Individuals
Date Issued
01 June 2018
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
Abstract
Orr, Jeremy E., Erica C. Heinrich, Matea Djokic, Dillon Gilbertson, Pamela N. Deyoung, Cecilia Anza-Ramirez, Francisco C. Villafuerte, Frank L. Powell, Atul Malhotra, and Tatum Simonson. Adaptive servoventilation as treatment for central sleep apnea due to high-altitude periodic breathing in nonacclimatized healthy individuals. High Alt Med Biol. 19:178-184, 2018. Aims: Central sleep apnea (CSA) is common at high altitude, leading to desaturation and sleep disruption. We hypothesized that noninvasive ventilation using adaptive servoventilation (ASV) would be effective at stabilizing CSA at altitude. Supplemental oxygen was evaluated for comparison. Methods: Healthy subjects were brought from sea level to 3800 m and underwent polysomnography on three consecutive nights. Subjects underwent each condition-No treatment, ASV, and supplemental oxygen-in random order. The primary outcome was the effect of ASV on oxygen desaturation index (ODI). Secondary outcomes included oxygen saturation, arousals, symptoms, and comparison to supplemental oxygen. Results: Eighteen subjects underwent at least two treatment conditions. There was a significant difference in ODI across the three treatments. There was no statistical difference in ODI between no treatment and ASV (17.1 ± 4.2 vs. 10.7 ± 2.9 events/hour; p > 0.17) and no difference in saturation or arousal index. Compared with no treatment, oxygen improved the ODI (16.5 ± 4.5 events/hour vs. 0.5 ± 0.2 events/hour; p < 0.003), in addition to saturation and arousal index. Conclusions: We found that ASV was not clearly efficacious at controlling CSA in persons traveling to 3800 m, whereas supplemental oxygen resolved CSA. Adjustment in the ASV algorithm may improve efficacy. ASV may have utility in acclimatized persons or at more modest altitudes.
Start page
178
End page
184
Volume
19
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Sistema respiratorio Fisiología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85049085305
PubMed ID
Source
High Altitude Medicine and Biology
ISSN of the container
15270297
Sponsor(s)
This research is supported by The University of California San Diego Center for Physiological Genomics of Low Oxygen (CPLGO) Office of Research Affairs Support for Center Development. The sponsor had no role in the design or conduct of this research. Dr. J.E.O. is supported by NIH F32HL131306 and the NIH Loan Repayment Program. Dr. E.C.H. is supported by NIH F32HL131218. M.D. is supported by the UC San Diego Ledell Family Award and Frontiers of Innovation Scholars Program. Dr. F.L.P. is PI on NIH R01 HL 081823. Dr. A.M. is PI on NIH RO1 HL085188, K24 HL132105, and T32 HL134632 and co-investigator on R21 HL121794, RO1 HL 119201, and RO1 HL081823. As an Officer of the ATS, Dr. A.M. has relinquished all outside personal income since 2012. Dr. T.S. is PI on R00HL118215 and supported by the American Physiological Society Giles Filley Award. ResMed provided a philanthropic donation to UCSD in support of a sleep center but had no role in funding, study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of this research.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus