McEvoy R D, Mykytyn I, Sajkov D, Flavell H, Marshall R, Antic R, Thornton A T
Sleep Disorders Unit, Repatriation General Hospital, Daw Park, South Australia.
Thorax. 1995 Jun;50(6):613-9. doi: 10.1136/thx.50.6.613.
This study was undertaken to establish the prevalence of, and the factors contributing towards, sleep disordered breathing in patients with quadriplegia.
Forty representative quadriplegic patients (time since injury > 6 months, injury level C8 and above, Frankel category A, B, or C; mean (SE) age 35.0 (1.7) years) had home sleep studies in which EEG, EOG, submental EMG, body movement, nasal airflow, respiratory effort, and pulse oximetry (SpO2) were measured. Patients reporting post traumatic amnesia of > 24 hours, drug or alcohol abuse or other major medical illness were excluded from the study. A questionnaire on medications and sleep was administered and supine blood pressure, awake SpO2, spirometric values, height, and neck circumference were measured.
A pattern of sustained hypoventilation was not observed in any of the patients. Sleep apnoeas and hypopnoeas were, however, common. Eleven patients (27.5%) had a respiratory disturbance index (RDI, apnoeas plus hypopnoeas per hour of sleep) of > or = 15, with nadir SpO2 ranging from 49% to 95%. Twelve of the 40 (30%) had an apnoea index (AI) of > or = 5 and, of these, nine (75%) had predominantly obstructive apnoeas-that is, > 80% of apnoeas were obstructive or mixed. This represents a prevalence of sleep disordered breathing more than twice that observed in normal populations. For the study population RDI correlated with systolic and diastolic blood pressure and neck circumference. RDI was higher in patients who slept supine compared with those in other postures. Daytime sleepiness was a common complaint in the study population and sleep architecture was considerably disturbed with decreased REM sleep and increased stage 1 non-REM sleep.
Sleep disordered breathing is common in quadriplegic patients and sleep disturbance is significant. The predominant type of apnoea is obstructive. As with non-quadriplegic patients with sleep apnoea, sleep disordered breathing in quadriplegics is associated with increased neck circumference and the supine sleep posture.
本研究旨在确定四肢瘫痪患者睡眠呼吸障碍的患病率及其影响因素。
40例具有代表性的四肢瘫痪患者(受伤时间>6个月,损伤平面在C8及以上,Frankel分级为A、B或C;平均(标准误)年龄35.0(1.7)岁)进行了家庭睡眠研究,测量了脑电图、眼电图、颏下肌电图、身体活动、鼻气流、呼吸努力和脉搏血氧饱和度(SpO2)。报告有超过24小时创伤后遗忘、药物或酒精滥用或其他重大内科疾病的患者被排除在研究之外。发放了关于药物和睡眠的问卷,并测量了仰卧位血压、清醒时SpO2、肺功能指标、身高和颈围。
未在任何患者中观察到持续通气不足的模式。然而,睡眠呼吸暂停和呼吸浅慢很常见。11例患者(27.5%)的呼吸紊乱指数(RDI,每小时睡眠中的呼吸暂停加呼吸浅慢次数)≥15,最低SpO2范围为49%至95%。40例患者中有12例(30%)的呼吸暂停指数(AI)≥5,其中9例(75%)主要为阻塞性呼吸暂停,即超过80%的呼吸暂停为阻塞性或混合性。这表明睡眠呼吸障碍的患病率是正常人群中观察到的两倍多。对于研究人群,RDI与收缩压、舒张压和颈围相关。与其他姿势的患者相比,仰卧位睡眠的患者RDI更高。白天嗜睡是研究人群中的常见主诉,睡眠结构受到显著干扰,快速眼动睡眠减少,1期非快速眼动睡眠增加。
睡眠呼吸障碍在四肢瘫痪患者中很常见,睡眠障碍很明显。主要的呼吸暂停类型是阻塞性的。与非四肢瘫痪的睡眠呼吸暂停患者一样,四肢瘫痪患者的睡眠呼吸障碍与颈围增加和仰卧位睡眠姿势有关。