Busch David R, Lynch Jennifer M, Winters Madeline E, McCarthy Ann L, Newland John J, Ko Tiffany, Cornaglia Mary Anne, Radcliffe Jerilynn, McDonough Joseph M, Samuel John, Matthews Edward, Xiao Rui, Yodh Arjun G, Marcus Carole L, Licht Daniel J, Tapia Ignacio E
Division of Neurology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Sleep. 2016 Jan 1;39(1):209-16. doi: 10.5665/sleep.5350.
Children with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) often experience periods of hypercapnia during sleep, a potent stimulator of cerebral blood flow (CBF). Considering this hypercapnia exposure during sleep, it is possible that children with OSAS have abnormal CBF responses to hypercapnia even during wakefulness. Therefore, we hypothesized that children with OSAS have blunted CBF response to hypercapnia during wakefulness, compared to snorers and controls.
CBF changes during hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR) were tested in children with OSAS, snorers, and healthy controls using diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS). Peak CBF changes with respect to pre-hypercapnic baseline were measured for each group. The study was conducted at an academic pediatric sleep center.
Twelve children with OSAS (aged 10.1 ± 2.5 [mean ± standard deviation] y, obstructive apnea hypopnea index [AHI] = 9.4 [5.1-15.4] [median, interquartile range] events/hour), eight snorers (11 ± 3 y, 0.5 [0-1.3] events/hour), and 10 controls (11.4 ± 2.6 y, 0.3 [0.2-0.4] events/hour) were studied. The fractional CBF change during hypercapnia, normalized to the change in end-tidal carbon dioxide, was significantly higher in controls (9 ± 1.8 %/mmHg) compared to OSAS (7.1 ± 1.5, P = 0.023) and snorers (6.7 ± 1.9, P = 0.025).
Children with OSAS and snorers have blunted CBF response to hypercapnia during wakefulness compared to controls. Noninvasive DCS blood flow measurements of hypercapnic reactivity offer insights into physiopathology of OSAS in children, which could lead to further understanding about the central nervous system complications of OSAS.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停综合征(OSAS)患儿在睡眠期间常经历高碳酸血症,这是脑血流量(CBF)的有力刺激因素。考虑到睡眠期间的这种高碳酸血症暴露情况,即使在清醒状态下,OSAS患儿对高碳酸血症的CBF反应也可能异常。因此,我们假设与打鼾者和对照组相比,OSAS患儿在清醒状态下对高碳酸血症的CBF反应减弱。
使用扩散相关光谱法(DCS)对OSAS患儿、打鼾者和健康对照组儿童进行高碳酸通气反应(HCVR)期间的CBF变化测试。测量每组相对于高碳酸血症前基线的CBF峰值变化。该研究在一家学术性儿科睡眠中心进行。
研究了12名OSAS患儿(年龄10.1±2.5[均值±标准差]岁,阻塞性呼吸暂停低通气指数[AHI]=9.4[5.1 - 15.4][中位数,四分位间距]次/小时)、8名打鼾者(11±3岁,0.5[0 - 1.3]次/小时)和10名对照组儿童(11.4±2.6岁,0.3[0.2 - 0.4]次/小时)。与OSAS组(7.1±1.5,P = 0.023)和打鼾者组(6.7±1.9,P = 0.025)相比,对照组在高碳酸血症期间的CBF分数变化(以呼气末二氧化碳变化进行标准化)显著更高(9±1.8%/mmHg)。
与对照组相比,OSAS患儿和打鼾者在清醒状态下对高碳酸血症的CBF反应减弱。高碳酸反应性的无创DCS血流测量为儿童OSAS的病理生理学提供了见解,这可能有助于进一步了解OSAS的中枢神经系统并发症。