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Outline. I. Introduction: Clinical Aspects of OSAA. Case scenarioB. Definition and epidemiologyC. Symptoms and signs D. Description of sleep apnea eventE. Diagnosis: polysomnographyII. Pathophysiology of OSAA. Mechanical/AnatomicB. Pulmonary1. Mechanics of breathing in OSA2. Effects of obstruction/apnea on gas exchangeC. Cardiovascular effects of OSA1. Effects on the pulmonary circulation2. Effects on the systemic circulationD. Disturbances in sleep architecture an20
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1. Using the Pathophysiology of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) to Teach Cardiopulmonary Integration
Michael G. Levitzky, Ph.D.
Department of Physiology
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center
1901 Perdido Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70112-1393
Phone: 504 568-6184
Fax: 504 568-6158
E-mail: mlevit@lsuhsc.edu
2. Outline I. Introduction: Clinical Aspects of OSA
A. Case scenario
B. Definition and epidemiology
C. Symptoms and signs
D. Description of sleep apnea event
E. Diagnosis: polysomnography
II. Pathophysiology of OSA
A. Mechanical/Anatomic
B. Pulmonary
1. Mechanics of breathing in OSA
2. Effects of obstruction/apnea on gas exchange
C. Cardiovascular effects of OSA
1. Effects on the pulmonary circulation
2. Effects on the systemic circulation
D. Disturbances in sleep architecture and hypersomnolence
III. Treatment of OSA: CPAP
IV. References
3. Case Scenario A 61 year old professor comes to the family physician because he feels tired all the time. He often falls asleep when he attends lectures, seminars, or boring meetings. Although he says he sleeps through the night (except to get up to urinate), his wife says he snores loudly and often seems to stop breathing and gasp for breath. He is restless and thrashes around in bed. He almost always wakes up with a headache and for the past year he has been having trouble remembering things. He is 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighs 250 pounds. His heart rate is 80/min, blood pressure is 135/95 mmHg and his respiratory rate is 15/min. His electrocardiogram, chest radiograph, and echocardiogram strongly suggest pulmonary hypertension.
Diagnosis: Obstructive Sleep Apnea
4. Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA): Definition and Epidemiology Definition: = 15 apneas (> 10 sec) and/or hypopneas per hour of sleep because of sleep-related collapse of the upper airway (Note that as much as 40-70% of resistance to airflow is normally in upper airway)
Associated with snoring, but not everyone who snores has OSA
May occur in 9% of middle-aged men and 4% of middle-aged women in US; estimates in the literature have a very wide range—one source stated that 85% of people with OSA are undiagnosed
Prevalence increases with age, body weight, pregnancy
High prevalence in 3- to 5-year old children: may be as high as 5%
5. Symptoms of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (In descending order of approximate incidence)
Loud snoring
Hypersomnolence (Excessive Daytime Sleepiness)
Depressed mentation
Altered personality
Impotence
Headaches upon waking
Nocturia
6. Signs of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Systemic hypertension
Pulmonary hypertension (right axis deviation on ECG)
Polycythemia
Cor pulmonale
Bradycardia during apneic event
Tachycardia after airflow restored
Typically no respiratory abnormality while awake
Arterial blood gasses while awake may show metabolic alkalosis
7. Description of Sleep Apnea Event Upper airway obstruction
Intermittent obstruction: snoring
Complete obstruction
Decreased alveolar ventilation
Decreased alveolar PO2 ; increased alveolar PCO2
Decreased arterial PO2 ; increased arterial PCO2
Stimulation of arterial chemoreceptors; central chemoreceptors
Arousal
Secondary hyperventilation?
10. Diagnosis: Polysomnography Variables that may be determined include:
EEG and electrooculogram (for sleep state); EMG
Airflow at nose or mouth (thermistor, pneumotachograph)
End-tidal CO2
Chest and abdominal motion (impedance plethysmography)
ECG
Blood pressure
Pulse oximetry
Esophageal pressure (intrapleural pressure)
Autonomic nervous system activity (finger tonometer)
13. Pathophysiology of Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Mechanical
Short, thick neck
Neck flexion, supine position
Nasal obstruction, congestion, polyps
Surface tension of upper airway lining fluid
14. Pathophysiology of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (continued) Anatomic
Enlarged tonsils and adenoids (esp. ages 3-5), enlarged uvula
Macroglossia
Retrognathia, craniofacial abnormalities
Compliant (floppy) pharynx, especially soft palate
Fat deposition in lateral walls of pharynx, pharyngeal dilator muscles (obesity)
Submucosal edema in lateral walls of pharynx
15. Pathophysiology of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (continued) Physiologic
Decreased function of upper airway dilator muscles (more than 20 skeletal muscles normally involved)
Decreased pharyngeal dilator reflex response
Decreased chemoreceptor drive/central drive (mixed with central sleep apnea)
Impaired arousal response
Alcohol, depressant drugs
18. Mechanics of Breathing in Obstructive Sleep Apnea Does negative pressure in the upper airway cause obstruction or does obstruction cause negative pressure in the upper airway?
Forced inhalation through the nose causes increased nasal resistance to airflow
Mueller maneuver causes intrapleural pressure to fall to approximately -30 cm H2O; as low as -80 cm H2O during episodes of obstructive sleep apnea?
21. Why Obstruction Occurs During Sleep Supine position
Control of breathing during normal non-rapid eye movement sleep
Lack of “wakefulness” drive
Minute volume decreases about 16%
PaCO2 increases 4-6 mmHg
SaO2 decreases as much as 2%
Decreased tone of pharyngeal muscles
Depressed reflexes, including pharyngeal dilator
Depressed response to hypoxia in men
REM sleep decreases tone of intercostal and accessory muscles, less effect on diaphragm; depression of minute volume, increase in CO2 not as great, depression of response to hypoxia greater
22. Possible Explanation for Metabolic Alkalosis When Patient is Awake Chronic repeated obstructions cause carbon dioxide retention and therefore respiratory acidosis
Compensatory renal retention of bicarbonate and excretion of hydrogen ions leads to metabolic alkalosis when PaCO2 is normal during awake state
23. Effects of Obstruction on Pulmonary Circulation and Right Ventricle Hypoxic and hypercapnic pulmonary vasoconstriction cause pulmonary hypertension
Chronic nighttime hypoxia may cause erythropoiesis and polycythemia
Increased hematocrit increases blood viscosity
Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV), increased blood viscosity, pulmonary hypertension increase right ventricular afterload
Increased right ventricular afterload may lead to right ventricular hypertrophy and eventually cor pulmonale
26. Possible Explanation for Systemic Hypertension Repeated increases in sympathetic tone and systemic blood pressure during arousals may cause vascular remodeling and changes in endothelial function
27. Explanation for Morning Headaches Hypoxia and hypercapnia during obstruction cause dilatation of cerebral blood vessels
29. Possible Explanations for Bradycardia During Obstruction, Tachycardia after Airflow Restored Stimulation of arterial chemoreceptors usually increases heart rate because it increases tidal volume (lung inflation reflex)
Stimulation of arterial chemoreceptors without stretching the lungs causes bradycardia
After arousal leads to restoration of airflow, large tidal volumes stretch lungs and cause tachycardia
May hyperventilate immediately after arousal, then hypoventilate until CO2 is restored
30. Possible Explanation for Nocturia HPV, increased blood viscosity, pulmonary hypertension increase right ventricular afterload
Increased afterload leads to increased right ventricular end diastolic pressure and volume
Increased right ventricular end diastolic pressure and volume lead to increased right atrial volume
Increased right atrial volume increases secretion of atrial natriuretic peptide from atrial myocytes, which increases sodium excretion, and stretches receptors that suppress ADH secretion from the posterior pituitary gland
31. Explanation for Hypersomnolence or Excessive Daytime Sleepiness Repeated arousals (may be hundreds per night) interfere with sleep architecture, especially rapid eye movement sleep
Abnormal sleep architecture leads to daytime somnolence, decreased attentiveness, blunted mentation, depression, personality changes
Hypersomnolence increases risk of motor vehicle accidents
32. Ethanol Exacerbates Obstructive Sleep Apnea Ethanol depresses the responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia
Ethanol depresses the activity and tone of the genioglossal and pharyngeal dilator muscles
Ethanol depresses protective respiratory reflexes
33. Treatment of OSA Lifestyle:
Body position during sleep
Weight loss
Decreased ethanol consumption
Oral appliances
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
Surgical:
Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty
Tracheostomy
34. CPAP Mask Photo of CPAP Mask
36. Obstructive Sleep Apnea Web Sites http://www.aafp.org/afp/991115ap/2279.html
http://www.sleepdisorderchannel.com/osa/
37. References Caples SM, Gami AS, Somers, VK. Obstructive sleep apnea. Ann. Intern. Med. 142: 187-197, 2005
Guilleminault C, Tilkian A, Dement WC. The sleep apnea syndromes. Annu. Rev. Med. 27: 465-484, 1976
Kirkness JP, Krishnan V, Patil SP, Schneider H. Upper airway obstruction in snoring and upper airway resistance syndrome. In: Randerath WJ, Sanner BM, Somers VK (eds): Sleep Apnea. Prog. Respir. Res. Basel, Karger, 35: 79-89, 2006
Levitzky, Michael G. Pulmonary Physiology (7th ed.). 2007. New York: McGraw Hill
Ryan CM, Bradley TD. Pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea. J. Appl. Physiol. 99: 2440-2450, 2005
Schaefer T. Physiology of breathing during sleep. In: Randerath WJ, Sanner BM, Somers VK (eds): Sleep Apnea. Prog. Respir. Res. Basel, Karger, 35: 21-28, 2006