scholarly journals P209 Characteristics of east london children with severe obesity requiring non-invasive ventilation for sleep disordered breathing

Author(s):  
SMN Brown ◽  
J Rae ◽  
A Franklin ◽  
E Mapazire ◽  
J Bettencourt
SLEEP ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. A278-A279
Author(s):  
Cinthya Pena Orbea ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Vaishal Shah ◽  
Lara Jehi ◽  
Alex Milinovich ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction There is lack of clarity of sleep disordered breathing (SDB)--including the role of nocturnal hypoxia and confounding influence of obesity--on the clinical course of human coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We postulate that SDB portends increased risk of adverse COVID-19 clinical outcomes even after accounting for confounding factors. Methods A retrospective cohort analysis of COVID-19 and sleep laboratory observational registries March-November 2020 within the Cleveland Clinic health system was performed. Ordinal logistic regression assessed the association of SDB indices and World Health Organization (WHO)-7 COVID-19 clinical outcome (hospitalization, use of supplemental oxygen, non-invasive ventilation, mechanical ventilation/ECMO and death) in an unadjusted model and adjusted for age, sex, race, body mass index(BMI,kg/m2),diabetes mellitus, hypertension, coronary artery disease, heart failure, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cancer and smoking using SAS software. Results Of 19,449 (32%) patients positive for SARS-CoV-2,2,290 (6%) had an available sleep study. The analytic sample included 1788 of which 1,484(64%) had an apnea hypopnea index (AHI, 3–4% hypopnea oxygen desaturation)≥5. The median duration from sleep study to COVID test was 5.8 years (IQR:3.3–9.0). Age was 56.5±14.4 years,50.4% female,28% African American with BMI=35.9±8.9kg/m2. Nine percent of patients were hospitalized,10% with supplemental oxygen,6% used non-invasive ventilation,2% required ECMO or mechanical ventilation and 2% died. For every AHI increase of 5, the odds of a higher WHO-7 level increased 2% (OR=1.02,95%CI1.01-1.04,p=0.005),but the association was mitigated in the adjusted model (OR=1.00,95%CI:0.98,1.02,p=0.80). Per 5% increase in time spent with SaO2<90%, the odds of a higher WHO-7 level increased 10% (OR=1.10,95%CI1.06-1.13,p=<0.001) persisting in the adjusted model(OR=1.06,95%CI:1.02–1.10,p=0.002). For every decrease of 5% mean SaO2, the odds of a higher level WHO-7 increased 56% (OR=0.56,95%CI:0.46–0.67,p<0.001) persisting in the adjusted model(OR=0.72,95%CI:0.58–0.89,p=0.003). Conclusion Even after adjustment for obesity, underlying cardiopulmonary disease and smoking, sleep-related hypoxemia was a potential key pathophysiologic mechanism associated with increased morbidity and mortality in COVID-19. Elucidation of sleep-related hypoxemia as a risk stratification measure, particularly given the silent hypoxia inherent to early COVID-19, is critical for future investigation, as is the role of sleep-related hypoxia reversal as a target to improve COVID-19 outcomes. Support (if any) Cleveland Clinic Neurologic Institute Resource Development Award


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon G Pearse ◽  
Martin R Cowie ◽  
Rakesh Sharma ◽  
Ali Vazir ◽  
◽  
...  

Sleep-disordered breathing affects over half of patients with heart failure (HF) and is associated with a poor prognosis. It is an under-diagnosed condition and may be a missed therapeutic target. Obstructive sleep apnoea is caused by collapse of the pharynx, exacerbated by rostral fluid shift during sleep. The consequent negative intrathoracic pressure, hypoxaemia, sympathetic nervous system activation and arousals have deleterious cardiovascular effects. Treatment with continuous positive airway pressure may confer symptomatic and prognostic benefit in this group. In central sleep apnoea, the abnormality is with regulation of breathing in the brainstem, often causing a waxing-waning Cheyne Stokes respiration pattern. Non-invasive ventilation has not been shown to improve prognosis in these patients and the recently published SERVE-HF trial found increased mortality in those treated with adaptive servoventilation. The management of sleep-disordered breathing in patients with HF is evolving rapidly with significant implications for clinicians involved in their care.


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