Intra-night variation in apnea-hypopnea index affects diagnostics and prognostics of obstructive sleep apnea
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2019Author(s)
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10.1007/s11325-019-01885-5Metadata
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Nikkonen, S. Töyräs, J. Mervaala, E. Myllymaa, S. Terrill, P. Leppänen, T. (2019). Intra-night variation in apnea-hypopnea index affects diagnostics and prognostics of obstructive sleep apnea. Sleep and breathing, 24, 379–386. 10.1007/s11325-019-01885-5.Rights
Abstract
Background
Diagnostics of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is based on apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) determined as full-night average of occurred events. We investigate our hypothesis that intra-night variation in the frequency of obstructive events affects diagnostics and prognostics of OSA and should therefore be considered in clinical practice.
Methods
Polygraphic recordings of 1989 patients (mean follow-up 18.3 years) with suspected OSA were analyzed. Number and severity of individual obstructive events were calculated hourly for the first 6 h of sleep. OSA severity was determined based on the full-night AHI and AHI for the 2 h when the obstructive event frequency was highest (AHI2h). Hazard ratios for all-cause, cardiovascular, and non-cardiovascular mortalities were calculated for different OSA severity categories based on the full-night AHI and AHI2h.
Results
Frequency and duration of obstructive events varied hour-by-hour increasing towards morning. Using AHI2h led to a statistically significant rearrangement of patients between the OSA severity categories. The use of AHI2h for severity classification showed clearer relationship between the OSA severity and mortality than the full-night AHI.
Conclusions
Currently, the intra-night variation in frequency and severity of obstructive events is completely ignored by conventional, full-night AHI and considering this information could improve the diagnostics of OSA.