Special Care Dentistry, Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Belgium.
Department of ENT, Head and Neck Surgery, Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Belgium; Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium.
Sleep Med Rev. 2016 Jun;27:56-73. doi: 10.1016/j.smrv.2015.05.009. Epub 2015 Jun 9.
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is the most common sleep disordered breathing disorder (SDB) in adults and is characterized by a recurrent partial or complete collapse of the upper airway during sleep. This can be caused by many factors, sometimes interacting, such as skeletal malformations, soft tissue crowding, respiratory instability and the various effects of aging, obesity and gender that dictate craniofacial and upper airway anatomy. Research has demonstrated that the majority of patients exhibit at least one anatomical component such as retrognathia or a narrow posterior airway space that predisposes to the development of OSAS. Within the predisposing elements for OSAS many seem to point to anatomical characteristics. A standardized and relatively simple radiologic technique to evaluate anatomical craniofacial relationships is cephalometry. This has been used already for a long time in orthodontics, but is now gradually being introduced in OSAS treatment to envisage optimal treatment selection as well as to predict treatment outcomes. The purpose of the present review is to evaluate the contribution of cephalometry in the prediction of outcomes from OSAS treatments that depend on the upper airway morphology in their mechanisms of action such as oral appliances that advance the mandible as well as various surgical methods. In addition, an overview of imaging modalities and methods that currently are being used in cephalometric analysis in OSAS patients is provided. The findings indicate that isolated cephalometric parameters cannot be used to reliably predict treatment outcomes from mandibular advancement devices and surgical methods for OSAS. Extreme or outlying values of cephalometric parameters may rather be used as contra-indicators or 'red flags' instead of predictors.
阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停综合征(OSAS)是成人中最常见的睡眠呼吸障碍疾病(SDB),其特征是睡眠期间上气道反复出现部分或完全塌陷。这可能由多种因素引起,有时这些因素相互作用,例如骨骼畸形、软组织拥挤、呼吸不稳定以及决定颅面和上气道解剖结构的年龄、肥胖和性别等各种影响。研究表明,大多数患者至少存在一个解剖结构成分,如后缩颌或狭窄的后气道空间,这容易导致 OSAS 的发生。在 OSAS 的易患因素中,许多因素似乎都指向解剖特征。一种评估颅面解剖关系的标准化且相对简单的放射技术是头影测量术。这项技术在正畸学中已经使用了很长时间,但现在正在逐渐引入 OSAS 治疗中,以设想最佳治疗选择,并预测治疗结果。本综述的目的是评估头影测量术在预测依赖上气道形态学的 OSAS 治疗结果方面的贡献,这些治疗方法的作用机制是通过口腔矫正器来推进下颌,以及各种手术方法。此外,还概述了目前在 OSAS 患者的头影测量分析中使用的成像方式和方法。研究结果表明,孤立的头影测量参数不能可靠地预测下颌前伸装置和 OSAS 手术方法的治疗结果。头影测量参数的极端或异常值可能更适合作为禁忌症或“警示标志”,而不是预测指标。