Kajiura Y, Maeda H, Nishimura Y, Yahata T, Takatsuki K, Nakamura H, Yokoyama M
First Department of Internal Medicine, Kobe University School of Medicine, Japan.
Nihon Kyobu Shikkan Gakkai Zasshi. 1992 Dec;30(12):2151-7.
A 34-year-old female was admitted on June 25, 1990, for the evaluation of alveolar hypoventilation which worsened after her second delivery. She showed impairment of both hypercapnic and hypoxic ventilatory responses, and marked desaturation due to hypopnea and apnea during sleep. Although administration of methylxanthine and medroxyprogesterone was not very effective, after treatment with low flow oxygen, there was a marked decrease in the frequency and duration of desaturation during sleep and improvement of arterial daytime blood gases, which suggested the existence of hypoxic ventilatory depression in the pathophysiology of her nocturnal desaturation. Furthermore, the use of a negative pressure ventilator for 3 hours in the daytime for 10 days resulted in marked improvement of symptoms, arterial blood gases, respiratory muscle strength, and the frequency and duration of sleep desaturation. These findings suggest that both low flow oxygen therapy during sleep, and daytime negative pressure ventilation may be beneficial in patients with primary alveolar hypoventilation and central sleep apnea syndrome.