Jordan A S, Catcheside P G, O'Donoghue F J, Saunders N A, McEvoy R D
Sleep Disorders Unit, Repatriation General Hospital, Daw Park 5041, South Australia 5042, Australia.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2002 Jan;92(1):410-7. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00461.2001.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is more common in men than in women for reasons that are not clearly understood. An underlying difference between men and women in the respiratory-related neural control of upper airway dilator muscles has been suggested as a possible reason for the gender difference. We have compared three aspects of upper airway dilator muscle function in healthy men and women: 1) resting inspiratory genioglossus electromyogram (EMGgg) activity, 2) the respiratory EMGgg "afterdischarge" after a brief hypoxic stimulus, and 3) the relationship between the EMGgg and pharyngeal airway pressure. Inspired minute ventilation (VI), epiglottic pressure (P(epi)), and EMGgg and diaphragm EMG (EMGdi) activity were measured in 24 subjects (12 men, 12 women in the luteal menstrual phase) and were compared between genders while lying supine awake. Every 7-8 min over 2 h, subjects were exposed to 45-s periods of isocapnic hypoxia (9% O(2) in N(2)) that were abruptly terminated with one breath of 100% O(2). The relationship between P(epi) and EMGgg activity was also compared between genders. The results of 117 trials with satisfactory end-tidal PCO(2) control and no sighs or swallows are reported. There was no gender difference in the resting level of peak inspiratory EMGgg [3.7 +/- 0.8 (women) vs. 3.2 +/- 0.6% maximal activity (men)]. Repeated-measures ANOVA showed no gender or gender-by-time interaction effect between men and women in VI or EMGgg or EMGdi activity during or after the hypoxic stimulus. The relationship between P(epi) and EMGgg was not different between men (slope -0.63 +/- 0.20) and women (slope -0.69 +/- 0.33). These results do not support the hypothesis that the higher prevalence of OSA in men is related to an underlying gender difference in respiratory neural control of upper airway dilator muscles.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)在男性中比在女性中更为常见,其原因尚不清楚。男性和女性在上呼吸道扩张肌的呼吸相关神经控制方面的潜在差异被认为是性别差异的一个可能原因。我们比较了健康男性和女性上呼吸道扩张肌功能的三个方面:1)静息吸气时颏舌肌肌电图(EMGgg)活动,2)短暂低氧刺激后的呼吸EMGgg“后放电”,以及3)EMGgg与咽气道压力之间的关系。在24名受试者(12名男性,12名处于黄体期的女性)中测量了吸气分钟通气量(VI)、会厌压力(P(epi))以及EMGgg和膈肌肌电图(EMGdi)活动,并在清醒仰卧时比较了性别之间的差异。在2小时内,每隔7 - 8分钟,受试者暴露于45秒的等碳酸血症性低氧(氮气中9%氧气)中,随后用一口气100%氧气突然终止。还比较了性别之间P(epi)与EMGgg活动之间的关系。报告了117次试验的结果,这些试验的呼气末PCO₂控制良好,且无叹息或吞咽。静息吸气时EMGgg峰值水平在性别上无差异[3.7±0.8(女性)对3.2±0.6%最大活动(男性)]。重复测量方差分析显示,在低氧刺激期间或之后,男性和女性在VI、EMGgg或EMGdi活动方面不存在性别或性别×时间交互作用效应。男性(斜率 -0.63±0.20)和女性(斜率 -0.69±0.33)之间P(epi)与EMGgg的关系无差异。这些结果不支持OSA在男性中较高的患病率与上呼吸道扩张肌呼吸神经控制方面潜在的性别差异有关这一假设。