Wiegand D A, Latz B, Zwillich C W, Wiegand L
Department of Surgery, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Pennsylvania State University, Hershey 17033.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 1990 Oct;69(4):1262-9. doi: 10.1152/jappl.1990.69.4.1262.
Reduction in the activity of upper airway "dilator" muscles during sleep may allow the pharyngeal airway to collapse in some individuals. However, quantitative studies concerning the effect of sleep on specific upper airway muscles that may influence pharyngeal patency are sparse and inconclusive. We studied seven normal men (mean age 27, range 22-37 yr) during a single nocturnal sleep study and recorded sleep staging parameters, ventilation, and geniohyoid muscle electromyogram (EMGgh) during nasal breathing throughout the night. Anatomic landmarks for placement of intramuscular geniohyoid recording electrodes were determined from a cadaver study. These landmarks were used in percutaneous placement of wire electrodes, and raw and moving-time-averaged EMGgh activities were recorded. Sleep stage was determined using standard criteria. Stable periods of wakefulness and non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) and rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep were selected for analysis. The EMGgh exhibited phasic inspiratory activity during wakefulness and sleep in all subjects. In six of seven subjects, mean and peak inspiratory EMGgh activities were significant (P less than 0.05) reduced during stages 2 and 3/4 NREM sleep and REM sleep compared with wakefulness. This reduction of EMGgh activity was shown to result from a sleep-related decline in the level of tonic muscle activity. Phasic inspiratory EMGgh activity during all stages of sleep was not significantly different from that during wakefulness. Of interest, tonic, phasic, and peak EMGgh activities were not significantly reduced during REM sleep compared with any other sleep stage in any subject. In addition, the slope of onset of phasic EMGgh activity was not different during stage 2 NREM and REM sleep compared with wakefulness in these subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
睡眠期间上呼吸道“扩张”肌活动的降低可能会使一些人的咽部气道塌陷。然而,关于睡眠对可能影响咽部通畅的特定上呼吸道肌肉的影响的定量研究很少且尚无定论。我们在一项夜间睡眠研究中对7名正常男性(平均年龄27岁,范围22 - 37岁)进行了研究,在整个夜间鼻呼吸过程中记录睡眠分期参数、通气情况以及颏舌骨肌肌电图(EMGgh)。通过尸体研究确定了用于放置颏舌骨肌肌内记录电极的解剖标志。这些标志用于经皮放置线状电极,并记录原始和移动时间平均的EMGgh活动。使用标准标准确定睡眠阶段。选择清醒、非快速眼动(NREM)和快速眼动(REM)睡眠的稳定期进行分析。所有受试者在清醒和睡眠期间,EMGgh均表现出阶段性吸气活动。在7名受试者中的6名中,与清醒相比,在NREM睡眠2期和3/4期以及REM睡眠期间,平均和峰值吸气EMGgh活动显著降低(P小于0.05)。EMGgh活动的这种降低被证明是由于与睡眠相关的紧张性肌肉活动水平下降所致。睡眠各阶段的阶段性吸气EMGgh活动与清醒期间无显著差异。有趣的是,与任何其他睡眠阶段相比,任何受试者在REM睡眠期间的紧张性、阶段性和峰值EMGgh活动均未显著降低。此外,在这些受试者中,与清醒相比,NREM睡眠2期和REM睡眠期间阶段性EMGgh活动的起始斜率没有差异。(摘要截短至250字)