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HIGHLIGHTED TOPIC
Physiology and Pathophysiology of Sleep Apnea
Harvard Medical School and Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
Submitted 15 April 2004 ; accepted in final form 27 June 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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pharyngeal critical closing pressure; loop gain; gender
4% of adult men and 2% of adult women (48). In addition to the gender difference in prevalence, women with OSA have higher body mass indexes (BMIs) than men with equal-severity OSA (12, 31), suggesting that the pathophysiology of OSA may differ between genders. The pathophysiology of OSA is incompletely understood; however, it appears to involve aspects of both upper airway collapsibility and respiratory control stability (8, 45). There are multiple variables that contribute to airway collapsibility and respiratory control stability. Airway collapsibility is likely influenced by anatomical factors, such as bony and soft tissue structures as well as airway length, but also by physiological factors such as upper airway dilator muscle activity (24). Similarly, respiratory stability is determined by gas-exchange efficiency, circulatory delays to central and peripheral chemoreceptors, chemoresponsiveness, and potentially by respiratory neural memories such as respiratory afterdischarge or long-term facilitation (20). Many of these variables have been compared between men and women in an attempt to explain the male predominance in this disorder (1, 5, 6, 1417, 2229, 33, 34, 3739, 44, 49). Although studies have reported gender differences in some of these variables (24, 28, 29, 39, 49), it is important to note that each variable measured is only one contributor to overall upper airway collapsibility or respiratory control stability. In this study, we wished to compare global measurements of both respiratory control stability and upper airway collapsibility in men and women with OSA to determine whether differences exist and whether the factors contributing to sleep apnea are similar in the two genders.
To assess respiratory control stability, we measured the loop gain (LG) of the respiratory system. LG is a measure of an individual's susceptibility to periodic breathing and incorporates all of the factors involved in determining the respiratory control system stability previously mentioned. LG is quantified as the ratio of the ventilatory response to a disturbance (47). If LG is < 1, the ventilatory response will be smaller than the initial disturbance and so ventilation will become stable after a few oscillatory cycles. However, if LG is
1, the response will be equally large (if LG = 1) or larger (if LG > 1) than the initial disturbance, and hence periodic breathing will develop. Recently, Younes et al. (47) developed a method for estimating an individual's LG by artificially increasing the response to a disturbance using a proportional assist ventilator (PAV). The amount the response needs to be amplified to induce periodic breathing is inversely proportional to the patient's intrinsic LG. We utilized this technique to measure respiratory control stability in men and women with a range of severity of OSA.
We chose to assess airway collapsibility by measuring the pharyngeal critical closing pressure (Pcrit) (4). This is the nasal pressure below which the upper airway collapses and takes into consideration many anatomical and physiological factors. Sforza and colleagues (36) have previously compared Pcrit between men and women with equally severe OSA using a technique where upper airway dilator muscles are active. These authors reported that, although the women were more obese than men, Pcrit was more negative in women (suggesting a more stable upper airway due to either better anatomy or more effective action of the upper airway dilator muscles). We hypothesized that, for women to have equally severe OSA but a less collapsible airway, they should have a more unstable respiratory controller than men. This hypothesis was tested in the present study by measuring both the Pcrit and LG in men and women with equally severe OSA. However, if LG is an important contributor to apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), then it may be difficult to identify a gender difference in AHI-matched individuals. We therefore also compared LG and Pcrit in a group of BMI-matched men and women. In this group of subjects, we hypothesized that women would have less severe OSA than men and therefore both lower LG and/or Pcrit due to prior reports that both LG and Pcrit are lower in patients with mild to moderate OSA compared with severe OSA (10, 11, 47). The results of some of the subjects reported in this study were also included in another study conducted in our laboratory (40).
| METHODS |
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Protocol. This protocol is comprised of three studies that were performed on 2 or 3 nights in a random order. The first study was an overnight polysomnography without continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for determination of current apnea severity. The second and third studies involved measurement of the LG and Pcrit during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep in the supine position. If possible, both LG and Pcrit were determined on the same night. However, if there was insufficient sleep to obtain both measurements on the same night, then the subject returned on a third night to obtain the remaining data. The details of each of the three studies are described below.
Study 1: baseline polysomnography. A full-night polysomnography without CPAP was performed according to the standard laboratory protocol. Sleep was measured with four electroencephalograms, left and right electroocculogram, and submental electromyogram. Respiration was monitored by measurement of nasal pressure (PTAF2, Pro-Tech Services, Woodinville, WA), oronasal airflow (nasal-oral thermistor), arterial oxygen saturation (model 930 Pulse-Oximeter, Respironics, Murrysville, PA), and chest plus abdominal wall motion (piezo-electric bands). A tracheal microphone was used to monitor snoring. Body position and bilateral anterior tibialis electromyogram were also continuously recorded. Recording began between 2200 and 0000 and finished between 0500 and 0700. Subjects were instructed to sleep in the supine body position as much as possible. Data were acquired on Alice data acquisition software (Alice 3 or Alice Host, Respironics), and all studies were scored by a single technician in the standard manner (30), with arousals and respiratory events being scored according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine guidelines (2, 3). The single technician was blinded to any Pcrit/LG data that had been collected. Subjects were considered to have OSA if the AHI was >15 events/h.
Studies 2 and 3: equipment and measurements. For both the measurement of Pcrit and LG, the subjects were fitted with a nasal mask (Gel Mask, Respironics) attached to a heated pneumotachograph (model 3700A, Hans Rudolf, Kansas City, MO) and a differential pressure transducer (Validyne, Northbridge, CA) for measurement of inspiratory flow. This signal was integrated for measurement of tidal volume (VT). The pneumotachograph was then connected to a leak valve and then to the ventilator used in each study (details below). Mask pressure and CO2 were continuously measured, as were the electrocardiogram and arterial oxygen saturation. Two channels of electroencephalograms (C3-A2, O2-A1), left and right electroocculogram, and submental electromyogram were recorded for sleep staging. During LG measurements, the additional signals from the PAV of estimated inspiratory flow, volume, and pressure were recorded. All signals were recorded on a 16-channel Grass model 78 polygraph (Grass Instruments, Astro Med, West Warwick, RI). Selected signals (inspiratory flow; VT; mask pressure; PAV of inspiratory flow, volume, and pressure; CO2; arterial oxygen saturation; electroencephalogram; electrocardiogram) were simultaneously recorded on a personal computer using an analog-to-digital converter (1401 plus, Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK) and data acquisition software (Spike 2, version 3.19, Cambridge Electronic Design).
Protocol: Pcrit measurement. For the measurement of Pcrit, a modified CPAP device that could deliver both positive and negative airway pressure (Respironics) was connected to the mask. The airway pressure was initially set at the subject's prescribed CPAP level or at 4 cmH2O if the subject had not undergone a prior CPAP titration study. After sleep onset, the CPAP level was increased to abolish respiratory events and to normalize the inspiratory flow profile (no flow limitation). This level was used as the holding pressure for each subject. Once 5 min of stable NREM sleep (stage 2 or higher) had been achieved at the holding pressure, CPAP was abruptly reduced by 12 cmH2O during expiration and was held at this level for three to five breaths. The pressure was then returned to the holding pressure for 1 min before being dropped a further 12 cmH2O for another three to five breaths. This process of progressively dropping CPAP for three to five breaths every minute continued until obstructive apnea occurred during the reduction in CPAP. If arousal occurred during any pressure drop, the CPAP was returned to the holding pressure until stable sleep returned. The entire procedure of progressively dropping CPAP until obstruction was repeated two to five times in each subject.
Data analysis: Pcrit. The third to fifth breaths during a drop in CPAP were used for calculation of Pcrit only if the breaths appeared to be flow limited in shape (7) and were not associated with arousal from sleep or complete apnea. A breath was considered to be flow limited in shape if there was flattening or a plateau of flow throughout inspiration (7). The first and second breaths in a pressure drop were not used for analysis because the maximum flow does not stabilize until the third breath after reduction of CPAP (4). For all flow-limited breaths, mask pressure was plotted against maximum inspiratory flow, and linear regression was used to interpolate the pressure at which zero flow occurred. The measurement of Pcrit without direct measurement of respiratory effort (and therefore flow limitation) has been previously validated in seven patients with OSA and five healthy controls (19) in whom Pcrit was determined with the scorer blinded and not blinded to respiratory drive (epiglottic pressure).
Protocol: LG measurement. A PAV (BiPAP Vision, model 582059, Respironics) was attached to the mask for the measurement of LG. The PAV provides both a constant expiratory pressure and a variable inspiratory pressure that is proportionate to the subject's respiratory drive. If the subject takes a large breath, they will receive a large pressure support. However, if they take a small breath, they will only receive a small amount of pressure during inspiration. Thus PAV can be used to amplify the subjects' fluctuations in respiratory drive and, given there is a delay in the feedback circuit (due to gas exchange, circulation time to chemoreceptors, etc.) PAV can induce periodic breathing. The amount the subjects' intrinsic respiratory drive needs to be amplified to induce periodic breathing is inversely proportional to their intrinsic LG (47). The protocol for measurement of LG is very similar to that originally described by Younes and colleagues (47) and is outlined below. The ventilator was set in the PAV/T Custom mode with the backup rate set at 0 breaths/min and the initial settings being volume assist (elastance component) = 12 cmH2O/l, flow assist (resistance component) = 4 cmH2O·l1·s, and %assist = 0. With 0% assist, the inspiratory and expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP) are the same (i.e., CPAP). The EPAP level was initially set at the subject's prescribed CPAP level or at 4 cmH2O if the subject had not undergone a prior CPAP titration study. After sleep onset, the EPAP was increased to abolish respiratory events and to normalize the flow profile in the same manner as described for Pcrit measurement. When the subject was in stable NREM sleep (>5 min stage 2 or deeper), the %assist was gradually increased (10% increments every 2030 s) to 60%. The %assist was then increased more gradually (5% every 3060 s) until small cyclical oscillations in breathing were observed following an increase in %assist. After stable breathing resumed at this level of %assist, the VT amplification factor (VTAF) was determined by dropping the %assist to 0% for one breath and dividing the VT with no assist by the average VT over the last three breaths during assisted breathing (VTAF = assisted VT/unassisted VT). VTAF measurement was repeated several times at each level of assist, with each repeat separated by at least 30 s of stable breathing. The %assist was then increased in 5% increments until sustained periodic breathing developed (defined as 4 or more cycles of waxing and waning VT with the nadir VT being <50% of the peak VT with a cycle length of 2090 s). VTAF was recalculated after every increase in %assist. If 100% assist was reached without periodic breathing, the volume-assist component was increased until periodic breathing began or volume runaway occurred (see Ref. 46 for review). If at any time the subject developed flow or volume runaway, the level of assist was reduced by 5% and the component (flow or volume assist) that did not reach runaway was increased before the %assist was again increased. If at any time the subject briefly aroused, the %assist was held constant until at least 60 s of stable sleep and breathing had occurred. If full awakening occurred, the %assist was reduced to 0 or 10% until stable sleep (>5 min stage 2 or higher) resumed.
Data analysis: LG measurement. Each subject's intrinsic LG was calculated in the standard manner (47) as the inverse of the average VTAF measured two to six times at the level of assist immediately before the development of periodic breathing (LG = 1/average VTAF). If arousals occurred during periodic breathing (this occurred in only 1 subject), then the VTAF was averaged at the highest level of assist without arousals (because it is unclear whether periodic breathing would still have existed without arousals), and LG was assumed to be less than the inverse of this VTAF. Similarly, if periodic breathing was not induced, the LG was assigned a value less than the inverse of the highest VTAF obtained. For statistical comparisons, the LG was assumed to be equal to this value in these individuals. An example of periodic breathing induced with proportional assist ventilation is shown in Fig. 1.
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| RESULTS |
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Pcrit in the AHI-matched men and women did not differ between genders (0.35 ± 0.62 cmH2O in men vs. 0.18 ± 0.87 cmH2O in women, P = 0.63; Fig. 2). In four subjects (3 women), periodic breathing could not be induced, and thus a LG value of less than the reciprocal of the highest VTAF was obtained. These subjects are indicated in Fig. 2 (see legend). No gender difference existed in LG in the men and women with equally severe OSA (0.372 ± 0.02 vs. 0.368 ± 0.02, respectively, P = 0.92; Fig. 2).
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LG could not be determined precisely in five subjects in this comparison (4 women), and therefore a less than value for LG was used. LG did not differ in men and women matched for BMI (0.33 ± 0.03 in men and 0.38 ± 0.02 in women, P = 0.14; Fig. 3). Pcrit was significantly lower in women than in BMI-matched men (2.01 ± 0.62 and 1.16 ± 0.83 cmH2O, respectively, P = 0.005; Fig. 3). To explore gender effects on AHI independent of Pcrit, the Pcrit-adjusted AHI was computed for the BMI-matched men and women by regressing AHI on Pcrit. No significant difference was found between men and women (adjusted AHI = 41.4 ± 5.4 and 42.1 ± 6.1 events/h, respectively, P = 0.93). This suggests that, after accounting for potential differences in BMI, the only effect of gender on AHI occurs via effects on Pcrit.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Gender and airway collapsibility. Several previous studies have investigated gender differences in airway collapsibility and respiratory control in an attempt to explain the male predisposition to OSA. Sforza et al. (36) compared the Pcrit between 89 men and 17 women with equally severe OSA from a clinic population. The women in this comparison were significantly heavier than the men but had significantly lower Pcrit (1.6 vs. 2.2 cmH2O). This finding differs from the AHI-matched comparison in the present study. However, the magnitude of the difference between genders is very similar at 0.53 cmH2O. Given the standard deviation and number of subjects in the present study, power calculations indicate that we did not have sufficient power to detect such a small difference (0.53 cmH2O) in Pcrit between the AHI-matched men and women. Thus it is possible that the lack of a gender difference in Pcrit found in the current comparison of equally severe men and women is a result of a type II error. It is important to note that the techniques for Pcrit measurement in the study by Sforza et al. (36) differed from the present study in that the upper airway muscle activity was not minimal in the Sforza et al. study. Therefore, the differences in findings between these studies may be interpreted to indicate that the effectiveness of the upper airway muscles in reducing the collapsibility of the airway is greater in women than in men. This, however, is not supported by the study of Younes (45) where the compensatory effectiveness is reported to be similar in men and women.
The difference in Pcrit was more marked and statistically significant when comparing BMI-matched men and women (3.2 cmH2O). Previously, Pcrit has been reported to differ between individuals with the upper airway resistance syndrome and mild to moderate OSA by 2.4 cmH2O (11), suggesting that the difference observed between BMI-matched men and women in the present study is likely physiologically important. Pcrit has also been compared between healthy men and women without OSA (34). In this study, Rowley and colleagues measured Pcrit in a similar manner to the present study, with drops in airway pressure being applied to the nose for two breaths during sleep. Between the negative pressure breaths, the subjects in the study of Rowley and colleagues breathed at atmospheric pressure rather than having CPAP, as in the present study. The eight men and eight women who Rowley and colleagues studied had similar BMIs and age, and the Pcrit was not different between genders. This is surprising based on the observations in the present study that the gender difference in airway collapsibility appeared to be relatively constant over the range of BMIs studied (Fig. 4). Clearly, there were fewer subjects in the present study at the lower end of the BMI range, and thus we may have been underpowered. However, it is possible that the subjects in the study of Rowley and colleagues had greater activation of the upper airway dilator muscles (because they were not studied on CPAP), resulting in more negative closing pressures than would have been the case had upper airway dilator muscles been passive. This effect may have been more pronounced in the slightly heavier men (BMI = 26.3 and 23.8 kg/m2 in the men and women). Further evidence supporting the idea that healthy young nonobese men have a more collapsible upper airway than women is provided by a study of inspiratory resistive loading during sleep in which Pillar and colleagues (28) reported that men had larger increases in airway resistance and more flow limitation than women during resistive load application. Importantly, upper airway muscle activity was measured in this study and was not found to be different between genders during stable sleep or resistive loading. Further studies are needed to assess the collapsibility of the upper airway and the effect of upper airway dilator muscles on collapsibility in men and women across the full range of BMI.
Respiratory control in men and women and OSA.
Respiration has been found to be less stable in severe OSA patients than in individuals with less severe OSA (47) and healthy controls (13), and so respiratory stability has been proposed as an important contributor to OSA pathogenesis. Thus the finding in the present study that a measure of respiratory control stability (LG) is not different between men and women with either equally severe OSA or equal BMIs is important because it indicates that respiratory control stability contributes to OSA similarly in men and women. Given this negative finding, it is important to assess whether there was sufficient power to detect physiologically important differences in LG. We believe that a difference in LG of 0.1 is physiologically relevant, given that the difference between severe and mild/moderate OSA has been previously reported to be 0.16 (47). With the standard deviation measured in this study, we could detect a difference of this magnitude between the 11 men and 11 women who were matched for AHI with 88% power and an
= 0.05. Thus the lack of a gender difference in the LG measured in this comparison is unlikely to be due to a type II statistical error. However, a difference in LG of 0.1 between BMI-matched men and women could only be detected with 68% power. It is therefore possible that the lack of a gender difference in LG between BMI-matched men and women may have been the result of a type II error. Our laboratory has previously shown that respiratory stability is not different between young healthy men and women without OSA (41), providing further evidence that LG is not different between genders. Interestingly, periodic breathing could not be induced in 6 of 19 women but only 1 of the 16 men in the present study. This may indicate that a subtle gender difference exists in respiratory control that was not detected by the LG measurement, or this may simply reflect different arousal thresholds between genders.
Although a number of investigators have assessed the impact of gender on sleep apnea pathogenesis (1, 5, 6, 1417, 2229, 33, 34, 3739, 44, 49), only a few studies have attempted to combine multiple variables in clinical sleep apnea populations. In one recent study, Younes (45) reported that men (n = 66) had more severe OSA than women (n = 16) after controlling for airway mechanics but that this difference did not persist after correction for baseline flow and ventilatory demand, suggesting that differences in OSA severity were likely related to ventilatory drive differences rather than control mechanisms. In the present study of either AHI- or BMI-matched men and women, no differences were observed in baseline flow, ventilatory demand, or LG. Although methodological differences between these two studies preclude rigorous conclusions, we would hypothesize that the higher BMI seen clinically in women with OSA likely results in upper airway collapsibility that more closely resembles men. Clearly, further research is required to verify this suggestion.
There are methodological issues in this study that deserve comment. First, in most subjects, the three measurements (AHI, LG, and Pcrit) were obtained on separate study nights. Although we restricted subjects to the supine body position for Pcrit and LG measures and requested subjects to sleep supine during the polysomnography, it is still possible that the severity of OSA, upper airway collapsibility, or respiratory control stability varied between nights and contributed to the variability of our measurements. This was, however, unavoidable, given the time required to make accurate measures of each variable of interest. Second, the women studied varied in terms of their menstrual status (8 premenopausal and 11 postmenopausal). The prevalence of OSA changes across menopause, and it is also possible that the pathogenic mechanisms resulting in OSA vary between pre- and postmenopausal women. This may have increased the variability of our measurements in women and made it more difficult to identify gender differences. Third, there are likely factors (such as upper airway dilator muscle activity and lung volume) that contribute to airway collapsibility in natural sleep that were altered by CPAP in the measurement of Pcrit in this study. Therefore, the measured Pcrit may differ from the actual airway collapsibility that occurs during normal sleep. However, we do not have any reason to suspect that this effect would be different between genders. Fourth, although measurement of LG includes many variables that contribute to overall respiratory stability, there are factors that would normally contribute to respiratory stability/instability during sleep that were excluded in our measurement. LG was measured during stable sleep without arousals, such that variable arousal thresholds and ventilatory responses to arousal did not confound our measurement. However, the ventilatory changes associated with arousal have been shown with modeling studies to destabilize breathing (21), and thus arousal may be an important variable that was not included in this study. Also, there is a prior report of a gender difference in the hypocapnic-apneic threshold (49), which when combined with the increased ventilatory response to arousal in men (17, 18) may make men more prone to ventilatory instability following arousal from sleep. Clearly, this effect was not measured in our LG measurement of respiratory stability. Finally, upper airway collapsibility was excluded from the current measurements of respiratory stability by studying the patients on EPAP sufficient to maintain airway patency. It is possible, if not likely, that central respiratory instability and upper airway collapsibility act synergistically in contributing to OSA severity. Further work is required to determine how these variables interact. In addition, recent data from our laboratory suggests that respiratory stability may only importantly contribute to OSA severity in individuals with Pcrit close to atmospheric pressure (40). By studying individuals with a range of collapsibility, we may have made it difficult to identify gender differences in LG that importantly contribute to the gender difference in OSA severity.
In conclusion, this study demonstrated that men have a more positive pharyngeal Pcrit and more severe OSA than women who are matched for BMI. The difference in Pcrit appeared to completely explain the difference in AHI between BMI-matched men and women. In addition, the difference in Pcrit appeared to persist across a wide range of BMIs. Respiratory control stability did not differ between either BMI- or AHI-matched men and women. These findings suggest that women are less prone to OSA than men because of an anatomically more stable upper airway, not because of a more stable respiratory control system.
| GRANTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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