[Relationship between respiratory event-related arousal and increased pulse rate in patients with obstructive sleep apnea].

S R Xu, C Peng, Y Wang, B Y Chen, J Q Wang, M R Yang, R Wang
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Stable PSG recordings of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep to compare the mean pulse rate (PR), the lowest PR 10 seconds before the onset of arousal, and the highest PR within 10 seconds after the end of arousal associated with each respiratory event. At the same time, the correlation between the arousal index and the pulse rate increase index (PRRI), as well as ΔPR<sub>1</sub> (highest PR-lowest PR) and ΔPR<sub>2</sub> (highest PR-mean PR), respectively, with the duration of respiratory events, the duration of arousal, the magnitude of pulse oximetry (SpO<sub>2</sub>) decline, and the lowest SpO<sub>2</sub> was analyzed. Among the 53 patients, 10 events without arousal and 10 events with arousal (matched for the magnitude of SpO<sub>2</sub> decline) were selected for NREM in each of the 53 patients, and ΔPR before and after termination of respiratory events in the two groups was compared. In addition, 50 patients were simultaneously subjected to portable sleep monitoring (PM) and divided into non-severe OSA group (<i>n</i>=22) and severe OSA group (<i>n</i>=28), and ΔPR≥3 times,≥6 times,≥9 times, and≥12 times after respiratory events were used as surrogate markers of arousal, and ΔPR was scored manually and integrated into the respiratory event index (REI) of PM. Then, we compared the agreement between REI calculated from the four PR cut-off points and the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI<sub>PSG</sub>) calculated by the gold standard PSG. <b>Results:</b> ΔPR<sub>1</sub> [(13±7)times/min] and ΔPR<sub>2</sub> [(11±6)times/min] were significantly higher in patients with severe OSA than in patients with non-OSA,mild and moderate OSA. The arousal index was positively correlated with the four PRRIs (<i>r</i> 0.968, 0.886, 0.773, 0.687, <i>P</i><0.001, respectively), and the highest PR [(77±12) times/min] within 10 s after the end of arousal was significantly higher than the lowest PR [(65±10) times/min, <i>t</i>=113.24, <i>P</i><0.001] and the mean PR [(67±11) times/min, <i>t</i>=103.02, <i>P</i><0.001]. ΔPR<sub>1</sub> and ΔPR<sub>2</sub> were moderately correlated with the decrease in SpO<sub>2</sub> (<i>r</i>=0.490, 0.469, <i>P</i><0.001). After matching the magnitude of SpO<sub>2</sub> decline, the ΔPR[(9±6)/min] before and after the termination of respiratory events with arousal was significantly higher than that of respiratory events without arousal [(6±5)/min, <i>t</i>=7.72, <i>P</i><0.001]. The differences between REI+PRRI<sub>3</sub> and REI+PRRI<sub>6</sub> and AHI<sub>PSG</sub> in the non-severe OSA group were not statistically significant (<i>P</i> values 0.055 and 0.442, respectively), and REI+PRRI<sub>6</sub> and AHI<sub>PSG</sub> showed good agreement (the mean difference was 0.7 times/h, 95%<i>CI</i> 8.3-7.0 times/h). 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the relationship between respiratory event-related arousal and increased pulse rate in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), and to evaluate whether elevated pulse rate can be used as a surrogate marker of arousal. Methods: A total of 80 patients [40 males and 40 females, age range (18-63 years), mean age (37±13) years] who attended the Sleep Center of the Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital for polysomnography (PSG) from January 2021 to August 2022 were enrolled. Stable PSG recordings of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep to compare the mean pulse rate (PR), the lowest PR 10 seconds before the onset of arousal, and the highest PR within 10 seconds after the end of arousal associated with each respiratory event. At the same time, the correlation between the arousal index and the pulse rate increase index (PRRI), as well as ΔPR1 (highest PR-lowest PR) and ΔPR2 (highest PR-mean PR), respectively, with the duration of respiratory events, the duration of arousal, the magnitude of pulse oximetry (SpO2) decline, and the lowest SpO2 was analyzed. Among the 53 patients, 10 events without arousal and 10 events with arousal (matched for the magnitude of SpO2 decline) were selected for NREM in each of the 53 patients, and ΔPR before and after termination of respiratory events in the two groups was compared. In addition, 50 patients were simultaneously subjected to portable sleep monitoring (PM) and divided into non-severe OSA group (n=22) and severe OSA group (n=28), and ΔPR≥3 times,≥6 times,≥9 times, and≥12 times after respiratory events were used as surrogate markers of arousal, and ΔPR was scored manually and integrated into the respiratory event index (REI) of PM. Then, we compared the agreement between REI calculated from the four PR cut-off points and the apnea-hypopnea index (AHIPSG) calculated by the gold standard PSG. Results: ΔPR1 [(13±7)times/min] and ΔPR2 [(11±6)times/min] were significantly higher in patients with severe OSA than in patients with non-OSA,mild and moderate OSA. The arousal index was positively correlated with the four PRRIs (r 0.968, 0.886, 0.773, 0.687, P<0.001, respectively), and the highest PR [(77±12) times/min] within 10 s after the end of arousal was significantly higher than the lowest PR [(65±10) times/min, t=113.24, P<0.001] and the mean PR [(67±11) times/min, t=103.02, P<0.001]. ΔPR1 and ΔPR2 were moderately correlated with the decrease in SpO2 (r=0.490, 0.469, P<0.001). After matching the magnitude of SpO2 decline, the ΔPR[(9±6)/min] before and after the termination of respiratory events with arousal was significantly higher than that of respiratory events without arousal [(6±5)/min, t=7.72, P<0.001]. The differences between REI+PRRI3 and REI+PRRI6 and AHIPSG in the non-severe OSA group were not statistically significant (P values 0.055 and 0.442, respectively), and REI+PRRI6 and AHIPSG showed good agreement (the mean difference was 0.7 times/h, 95%CI 8.3-7.0 times/h). The four indicators of PM in the severe OSA group were statistically different from AHIPSG (all P<0.05), and the agreement was poor. Conclusions: Respiratory event-related arousal in OSA patients is independently associated with increased PR, and frequent arousal may lead to increased frequency of PR fluctuations, and elevated PR may be used as a surrogate marker of arousal, especially in patients with non-severe OSA, where elevated PR≥6 times significantly improves the diagnostic agreement between PM and PSG.

[阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停患者呼吸事件相关觉醒与脉搏率升高的关系]。
目的:探讨阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者呼吸事件相关觉醒与脉搏率升高的关系,并评价脉搏率升高是否可以作为觉醒的替代指标。方法:选取2021年1月至2022年8月在天津医科大学总医院呼吸与重症医学科睡眠中心接受多导睡眠描记(PSG)检查的患者80例,男40例,女40例,年龄18-63岁,平均年龄(37±13)岁。稳定的PSG记录非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠的平均脉搏率(PR),唤醒开始前10秒内的最低PR和唤醒结束后10秒内的最高PR与每次呼吸事件相关。同时,分析唤醒指数与脉搏率增加指数(PRRI)以及ΔPR1(最高PR-最低PR)和ΔPR2(最高PR-平均PR)分别与呼吸事件持续时间、唤醒持续时间、脉搏血氧饱和度(SpO2)下降幅度和最低SpO2的相关性。在53例患者中,各选择10例无唤醒事件和10例有唤醒事件(SpO2下降幅度相匹配)进行NREM,比较两组呼吸事件终止前后ΔPR。另外,将50例患者同时进行便携式睡眠监测(PM),分为非重度OSA组(n=22)和重度OSA组(n=28),以呼吸事件发生后ΔPR≥3次、≥6次、≥9次、≥12次作为唤醒的替代指标,并对ΔPR进行人工评分,整合到PM的呼吸事件指数(REI)中。然后,我们比较了四个PR分界点计算的REI与金标准PSG计算的呼吸暂停-低通气指数(AHIPSG)之间的一致性。结果:重度OSA患者ΔPR1[(13±7)次/min]和ΔPR2[(11±6)次/min]明显高于非OSA、轻、中度OSA患者。唤醒指数与4项PRRIs呈正相关(r= 0.968, 0.886, 0.773, 0.687, Pt=113.24, Pt=103.02), P1和ΔPR2与SpO2下降中度相关(r=0.490, 0.469, P2下降),有唤醒的呼吸事件终止前后ΔPR[(9±6)/min]显著高于无唤醒的呼吸事件[(6±5)/min], t=7.72;非重度OSA组患者P3、REI+PRRI6、AHIPSG差异无统计学意义(P值分别为0.055、0.442),REI+PRRI6、AHIPSG差异有较好的一致性(平均差异为0.7次/h, 95%CI 8.3 ~ 7.0次/h)。重度OSA组PM 4项指标与AHIPSG差异有统计学意义(均p)。结论:OSA患者呼吸事件相关觉醒与PR升高独立相关,频繁觉醒可能导致PR波动频率增加,PR升高可作为觉醒的替代指标,尤其是非重度OSA患者,PR升高≥6次可显著提高PM与PSG的诊断一致性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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