Department of Population, Family & Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2023 Apr;228(4):459.e1-459.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2022.09.037. Epub 2022 Sep 29.
Maternal sleep-disordered breathing is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes and is considered to be deleterious to the developing fetus. Maternal obesity potentiates sleep-disordered breathing, which, in turn, may contribute to the effect of maternal obesity on adverse fetal outcomes. However, only a few empirical studies have evaluated the contemporaneous effects of maternal sleep-disordered breathing events on fetal well-being. These events include apnea and hypopnea with accompanying desaturations in oxyhemoglobin.
This study aimed to reconcile contradictory findings on the associations between maternal apnea or hypopnea events and clinical indicators of fetal compromise. It also sought to broaden the knowledge base by examining the fetal heart rate and heart rate variability before, during, and after episodes of maternal apnea or hypopnea. To accomplish this, we employed overnight polysomnography, the gold standard for ascertaining maternal sleep-disordered breathing, and synchronized it with continuous fetal electrocardiography.
A total of 84 pregnant women with obesity (body mass index >30 kg/m) participated in laboratory-based polysomnography with digitized fetal electrocardiography recordings during or near 36 weeks of gestation. Sleep was recorded, on average, for 7 hours. Decelerations in fetal heart rate were identified. Fetal heart rate and heart rate variability were quantified before, during, and after each apnea or hypopnea event. Event-level intensity (desaturation magnitude, duration, and nadir O saturation level) and person-level characteristics based on the full overnight recording (apnea-hypopnea index, mean O saturation, and O saturation variability) were analyzed as potential moderators using linear mixed effects models.
A total of 2936 sleep-disordered breathing events were identified, distributed among all but 2 participants. On average, participants exhibited 8.7 episodes of apnea or hypopnea per hour (mean desaturation duration, 19.1 seconds; mean O saturation nadir, 86.6% per episode); nearly half (n=39) of the participants met the criteria for obstructive sleep apnea. Only 45 of 2936 apnea or hypopnea events were followed by decelerations (1.5%). Conversely, most (n=333, 88%) of the 378 observed decelerations, including the prolonged ones, did not follow an apnea or a hypopnea event. Maternal sleep-disordered breathing burden, body mass index, and fetal sex were unrelated to the number of decelerations. Fetal heart rate variability increased during events of maternal apnea or hypopnea but returned to initial levels soon thereafter. There was a dose-response association between the size of the increase in fetal heart rate variability and the maternal apnea-hypopnea index, event duration, and desaturation depth. Longer desaturations were associated with a decreased likelihood of the variability returning to baseline levels after the event. The mean fetal heart rate did not change during episodes of maternal apnea or hypopnea.
Episodes of maternal sleep apnea and hypopnea did not evoke decelerations in the fetal heart rate despite the predisposing risk factors that accompany maternal obesity. The significance of the modest transitory increase in fetal heart rate variability in response to apnea and hypopnea episodes is not clear but may reflect compensatory, delimited autonomic responses to momentarily adverse conditions. This study found no evidence that episodes of maternal sleep-disordered breathing pose an immediate threat, as reflected in fetal heart rate responses, to the near-term fetus.
母体睡眠呼吸障碍与不良妊娠结局相关,被认为对发育中的胎儿有害。母体肥胖会加剧睡眠呼吸障碍,进而可能影响母体肥胖对胎儿不良结局的影响。然而,只有少数实证研究评估了母体睡眠呼吸障碍事件对胎儿健康的同期影响。这些事件包括伴有氧合血红蛋白饱和度下降的呼吸暂停和低通气。
本研究旨在调和关于母体呼吸暂停或低通气事件与胎儿受损临床指标之间关联的矛盾发现。它还通过检查母体呼吸暂停或低通气事件前后的胎儿心率和心率变异性来拓宽知识基础。为此,我们采用了整夜多导睡眠图,这是确定母体睡眠呼吸障碍的金标准,并将其与连续胎儿心电图同步。
共有 84 名肥胖孕妇(体重指数>30 kg/m)参与了基于实验室的多导睡眠图检查,同时在妊娠 36 周左右进行了数字化胎儿心电图记录。平均记录了 7 小时的睡眠。识别了胎儿心率减速。在每个呼吸暂停或低通气事件前后,量化了胎儿心率和心率变异性。使用线性混合效应模型,分析了事件级强度(饱和度降低幅度、持续时间和最低 O 饱和度水平)和基于整夜全记录的个体级特征(呼吸暂停-低通气指数、平均 O 饱和度和 O 饱和度变异性)作为潜在的调节剂。
总共确定了 2936 次睡眠呼吸障碍事件,分布在除了 2 名参与者之外的所有参与者中。平均而言,参与者每小时出现 8.7 次呼吸暂停或低通气事件(平均饱和度降低持续时间为 19.1 秒;平均饱和度最低为每事件 86.6%);近一半(n=39)的参与者符合阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停的标准。只有 2936 次呼吸暂停或低通气事件中的 45 次(1.5%)后出现减速。相反,大多数(n=333,88%)观察到的减速,包括延长减速,都没有跟随呼吸暂停或低通气事件。母体睡眠呼吸障碍负担、体重指数和胎儿性别与减速次数无关。胎儿心率变异性在母体呼吸暂停或低通气事件期间增加,但随后很快恢复到初始水平。胎儿心率变异性增加的大小与母体呼吸暂停-低通气指数、事件持续时间和饱和度降低深度之间存在剂量反应关系。较长的饱和度降低与事件后变异性恢复到基线水平的可能性降低有关。母体呼吸暂停或低通气事件期间,胎儿心率没有变化。
尽管母体肥胖伴有潜在的危险因素,但母体睡眠呼吸暂停和低通气事件并未引起胎儿心率减速。对呼吸暂停和低通气事件的适度短暂性胎儿心率变异性增加的意义尚不清楚,但可能反映了对暂时不利条件的代偿性、有限的自主反应。本研究没有发现母体睡眠呼吸障碍事件对近期胎儿构成直接威胁的证据,这反映在胎儿心率反应中。