journal article Jan 15, 2020

Changes in pharyngeal collapsibility and genioglossus reflex responses to negative pressure during the respiratory cycle in obstructive sleep apnoea

The Journal of Physiology Vol. 598 No. 3 pp. 567-580 · Wiley
Abstract
Key points
Impaired pharyngeal anatomy and increased airway collapsibility is a major cause of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and a mediator of its severity.
Upper airway reflexes to changes in airway pressure provide important protection against airway closure.
This study shows increased pharyngeal collapsibility and attenuated genioglossus reflex responses during expiration in people with OSA.
AbstractUpper airway collapse contributes to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) pathogenesis. Pharyngeal dilator muscle activity varies throughout the respiratory cycle and may contribute to dynamic changes in pharyngeal collapsibility. However, whether upper airway collapsibility and reflex responses to changes in airway pressure vary throughout the respiratory cycle in OSA is unclear. Thus, this study quantified differences in upper airway collapsibility and genioglossus electromyographic (EMG) activity and reflex responses during different phases of the respiratory cycle. Twelve middle‐aged people with OSA (2 female) were fitted with standard polysomnography equipment: a nasal mask, pneumotachograph, two fine‐wire intramuscular electrodes into the genioglossus, and a pressure catheter positioned at the epiglottis and a second at the choanae (the collapsible portion of the upper airway). At least 20 brief (∼250 ms) pressure pulses (∼−11 cmH2O at the mask) were delivered every 2–10 breaths during four conditions: (1) early inspiration, (2) mid‐inspiration, (3) early expiration, and (4) mid‐expiration. Mean baseline genioglossus EMG activity 100 ms prior to pulse delivery and genioglossus reflex responses were quantified for each condition. The upper airway collapsibility index (UACI), quantified as 100 × (nadir choanal − epiglottic pressure)/nadir choanal pressure during negative pressure pulses, varied throughout the respiratory cycle (early inspiration = 43 ± 25%, mid‐inspiration = 29 ± 19%, early expiration = 83 ± 19% and mid‐expiration = 95 ± 11% (mean ± SD) P < 0.01). Genioglossus EMG activity was lower during expiration (e.g. mid‐expiration vs. mid‐inspiration = 76 ± 23 vs. 127 ± 41% of early‐inspiration, P < 0.001). Similarly, genioglossus reflex excitation was delayed (39 ± 11 vs. 23 ± 7 ms, P < 0.001) and reflex excitation amplitude attenuated during mid‐expiration versus early inspiration (209 ± 36 vs. 286 ± 80%, P = 0.009). These findings may provide insight into the physiological mechanisms of pharyngeal collapse in OSA.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
53
[8]
Chiang AA "Obstructive sleep apnea and chronic intermittent hypoxia: a review" Chin J Physiol (2006)
[12]
Dong Y "Effect of continuous positive airway pressure on blood pressure in hypertensive patients with coronary artery bypass grafting and obstructive sleep apnea" Int J Clin Exp Med (2014)
[41]
Sleep Health Foundation(2017).Asleep on the Job: Costs of Inadequate Sleep in Australia. Sleep Health Foundation Canberra Australia.https://www.sleephealthfoundation.org.au/files/Asleep_on_the_job/Asleep_on_the_Job_SHF_report-WEB_small.pdf
[44]
Strohl KP "Nasal CPAP therapy, upper airway muscle activation, and obstructive sleep apnea" Am Rev Respir Dis (1986)

Showing 50 of 53 references

Cited By
14
Metrics
14
Citations
53
References
Details
Published
Jan 15, 2020
Vol/Issue
598(3)
Pages
567-580
License
View
Cite This Article
Amal M. Osman, Jayne C. Carberry, Simon C. Gandevia, et al. (2020). Changes in pharyngeal collapsibility and genioglossus reflex responses to negative pressure during the respiratory cycle in obstructive sleep apnoea. The Journal of Physiology, 598(3), 567-580. https://doi.org/10.1113/jp278433