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You are here: Home / Uncategorized / Sleep magnetic resonance imaging: Dynamic characteristics of the airway during sleep in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.

Sleep magnetic resonance imaging: Dynamic characteristics of the airway during sleep in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.

June 25, 2011 by Randy Clare Leave a Comment
Barrera JE.

Source

Division of Sleep Surgery, Department of Otolaryngology, Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas; Division of Sleep Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, U.S.A.. jose.barrera@us.af.mil.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS:

To determine the dynamic characteristics of airway obstruction in subjects with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) syndrome.

STUDY DESIGN:

A prospective cohort study of 20 OSA patients and 19 control subjects who underwent real-time magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evaluation between 2006 and 2008.

METHODS:

The dynamics of the upper airway were visualized using real-time MRI (RTHawk system, Stanford, CA) during natural sleep. Respiratory and desaturation events were correlated to polysomnogram results, and anatomic site of obstruction was determined from the real-time MRI sequences. The relation between visually observed airway obstructions and autonomic system changes was quantified and reliability calculated (Cronbach α, Aabel 2009; Gigawiz, Ltd., Tulsa, OK). An automated analysis tool was developed to determine which respiratory event is associated with the longest duration and location of obstruction in the posterior airway space (Matlab 2009; Mathworks, Inc., Natick, MA).

RESULTS:

Airway obstructions visualized on Sleep MRI during natural sleep included retropalatal, retroglossal, and combined obstruction. Respiratory events (mean rate of 31.9 per hour per subject) and desaturations (mean rate of 19.4 per hour per subject) temporally coincided with airway obstructive events. Intrarater reliability coefficients ranged from a low of 0.95 to a high of 1.0 for each rater. Inter-rater reliability coefficients ranged from a low of 0.85 to a high of 1.0.

CONCLUSIONS:

Sleep MRI is a novel and reliable approach to simultaneously evaluate airway obstructions and respiratory events in real time during natural sleep. Sleep MRI can define the dynamic characteristics of airway obstruction in both surgically naive and postsurgical OSA patients.

 

Laryngoscope. 2011 Jun;121(6):1327-35.

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Randy Clare
Managing Editor of SleepScholar and RespiratoryScholar
Dr. Steve Carstensen
Pankey Institute for Advanced Dental Education, American Academy of Dental Sleep Medicine.
Ruchir Patel MD
Founder & Medical Director at the Insomnia and Sleep Institute of Arizona.
Dr. John S. Viviano
AADSM Diplomate and member of various sleep organizations. Has lectured internationally on the treatment of Sleep-Disordered Breathing and the use of Acoustic Reflection.
Jeffroy Wyscarver
President, DDME Online, Sleep Lab Technology and Services for the Dental Community.
Claude Albertario
RPSGT, speaker, author and mentor in the field of sleep diagnostics with 25 yrs of management experience in one of New York's premier sleep centers.
Joseph Anderson
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Todd Austin
Managed sleep labs and has 15 experience in sleep diagnostics and therapeutic systems. .
Marietta Bibbs
Sleep specialist and manager of Sleep and Neurodiagnostics at Morton Plant Mease Healthcare.
Bradley Eli DMD, MS
Director, San Diego Headache and Facial Pain Center / Sleep Treatment and Research Institute
Edward Grandi
Executive Director of the American Sleep Apnea Association.
Edward Michaelson MD
Board Certified in Pulmonary Medicine, Internal Medicine and Sleep Medicine
Ashley Truitt
Founder & Director of Dental Sleep Medicine Worldwide, Co-Founder of TPT Dental.

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