Shepard J W, Pevernagie D A, Stanson A W, Daniels B K, Sheedy P F
Sleep Disorders Center, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1996 Jan;153(1):250-4. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.153.1.8542124.
Intraluminal airway pressure and pharyngeal muscle activity are widely recognized as major determinants of the size and collapsibility of the upper airway. In addition, changes in the volume or pressure of tissue surrounding the pharyngeal airway may significantly influence its size. The present study used fast computed tomography (CT) to determine the effects of changes in central venous pressure (CVP) on upper airway size. Ten awake male patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) were studied. Scans were performed at functional residual capacity (FRC) and at the end of a tidal inspiration (VTei) under three conditions of CVP: (1) at baseline (CVP nl) with patients lying supine; (2) at decreased CVP (CVP-) by inflating blood pressure cuffs to 40 mm Hg on both legs; and (3) at increased CVP (CVP+) by elevating both legs to 33 degrees. At FRC, changes in CVP had no significant effect on either mean or minimum cross-sectional area (CSA) of the upper airway. In contrast, an analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicated that alterations in CVP were associated with changes in mean CSA (p = 0.03) and to a lesser extent in minimum CSA (p = 0.07) at VTei. With the legs elevated (CVP+), neither mean nor minimum CSA showed any significant change with tidal breathing. However, after leg-cuff inflation (CVP-), highly significant increases in both mean (163 +/- 22 to 218 +/- 19 mm2, p = 0.001) and minimum (48 +/- 8 to 85 +/- 12 mm2, p = 0.02) CSA were detected. Changes in mean and minimum CSA with tidal breathing at baseline (CVP nl) were intermediate. These results indicate that changes in CVP significantly alter the response of the upper airway to tidal breathing. They further suggest that increases in upper airway size with tidal breathing may be related to reduction in venous blood volume in pharyngeal and neck tissues as the generation of negative intrathoracic pressure during inspiration increases venous return to the chest.
管腔内气道压力和咽部肌肉活动被广泛认为是上气道大小和可塌陷性的主要决定因素。此外,咽部气道周围组织的体积或压力变化可能会显著影响其大小。本研究使用快速计算机断层扫描(CT)来确定中心静脉压(CVP)变化对上气道大小的影响。对10名患有阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的清醒男性患者进行了研究。在三种CVP条件下,于功能残气量(FRC)和潮气吸气末(VTei)进行扫描:(1)患者仰卧位时的基线状态(CVP nl);(2)通过在双腿上充气血压袖带至40 mmHg使CVP降低(CVP-);(3)将双腿抬高至33度使CVP升高(CVP+)。在FRC时,CVP变化对上气道的平均或最小横截面积(CSA)均无显著影响。相比之下,方差分析(ANOVA)表明,在VTei时,CVP的改变与平均CSA的变化相关(p = 0.03),对最小CSA的影响较小(p = 0.07)。双腿抬高(CVP+)时,平均和最小CSA在潮气呼吸时均未显示出任何显著变化。然而,在腿部袖带充气后(CVP-),平均CSA(从163±22至218±19 mm²,p = 0.001)和最小CSA(从48±8至85±12 mm²,p = 0.02)均检测到高度显著增加。基线(CVP nl)时平均和最小CSA随潮气呼吸的变化处于中间水平。这些结果表明,CVP变化显著改变了上气道对潮气呼吸的反应。它们进一步表明,随着潮气呼吸上气道大小的增加可能与咽部和颈部组织静脉血容量的减少有关,因为吸气时胸内负压的产生增加了静脉回流至胸部。