Clinical Slide Set. Obstructive Sleep Apnea
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
in the clinic
Obstructive sleep
apnea
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Who should be screened for OSA?
All adults who answer yes to either question:
Are they dissatisfied with their sleep?
Do they have daytime sleepiness?
Patients with risk factors
Obesity, especially BMI >35 kg/m2
Family history of obstructive sleep apnea
Retrognathia
Treatment-resistant hypertension
CHF, atrial fibrillation, stroke
Type 2 diabetes
Patients with high-risk driving occupations or daytime
sleepiness + motor vehicle crash
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What are the screening tools?
Berlin questionnaire (primary care setting)
10 items
Snoring severity, significance of daytime sleepiness,
witnessed apnea, obesity, hypertension
STOP-BANG screening test (preoperative setting)
8 items
STOP: Snoring, Tired, Observed apnea, high blood
Pressure history
BANG: elevated BMI, Age > 50, increased Neck
circumference, Gender male
Neither tool precludes formal sleep testing
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Can OSA be prevented?
Weight loss can reduce severity
May also achieve remission
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Screening
and Prevention...
Ask all adults about sleep problems or daytime sleepiness
If response is positive: perform OSA screening
Take further clinical history
Use validated questionnaire
Screen is also warranted for all patients with:
Significant obesity
CVD
History of drowsiness while driving
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What symptoms should prompt
consideration of OSA?
Witnessed episodes of apnea
Loud, frequent, bothersome snoring
Choking/gasping during sleep
Excessive daytime sleepiness
Drowsy driving
Unrefreshing sleep, sleep fragmentation
Insomnia
Nocturia
Morning headaches
Decreased concentration, memory loss
Decreased libido
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
In the absence of symptoms, what other
diseases should prompt evaluation?
Morbid obesity
If patient scheduled for bariatric surgery
Hypertension
If refractory to medical therapy
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What other conditions should be
considered?
Chronic sleep deprivation disorder (shift-work disorder)
Circadian rhythm disorder
Depression and anxiety
Hypothyroidism
Obesity hypoventilation syndrome
Central sleep apnea syndrome
Congestive heart failure (Cheyne-Stokes respiration)
Opiate-induced central sleep apnea
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What physical exam findings are important?
Respiratory, CV, and neurologic systems
Presence and degree of obesity
Signs of upper airway narrowing
Neck >16” women, >17” men
Mallampati score of 3 or 4
Macroglossia, tonsillar hypertrophy
Enlarged or elongated uvula, high/arched palate
Nasal obstruction
Retrognathia
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What type of sleep study should be
ordered?
Polysomnography in the sleep laboratory
Standard method for diagnosis and determining severity
Assesses other sleep disorders
Recommended: “full-night” sleep study
Alternative: “Split-night” study
Initial diagnostic recording
Then positive airway pressure titration the same night
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What is the role of in-home sleep studies?
Used for uncomplicated cases
Clinical probability high + no cardiopulmonary disease
Validity + utility unclear with serious comorbidities
Convenient and lower cost
May underestimate severity
If test is negative: in-lab sleep study
Definitively exclude diagnosis
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What variables are reported on a sleep
study report, and what do they mean?
Apnea-hypopnea index (AHI)
Episodes of apnea and hypopnea per hour of sleep
Mild OSA: AHI ≥5 and <15/h
Moderate OSA: AHI ≥15 and <30
Severe OSA: AHI ≥30
Apnea: airflow cessation ≥10 sec
Hypopnea: airflow reduction ≥10 sec plus 3% or 4% OxyHb
desaturation or arousal from sleep
Other measures of sleep-disordered breathing, total
sleep time, measures of sleep quality
Epileptiform EEG, limb movement, nocturnal arrhythmia
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Do patients need to be seen by a sleep
specialist before a sleep study is ordered?
Sleep specialist evaluation recommended
Complex sleep-disordered breathing processes suspected
Other sleep disorder suspected
To ensure proper diagnostic tests ordered
Prior evaluation not needed in other cases
But clinician should discuss options with patient first
Explain OSA therapy and why it may be initiated
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Diagnosis...
Evaluate patients with symptoms that suggest OSA
Loud snoring, nocturnal choking or gasping
Significant daytime sleepiness, history drowsy driving
Witnessed episodes of apnea
Evaluate patients with no symptoms if
Undergoing bariatric surgery
Have treatment-resistant hypertension
In-lab sleep testing: gold standard
In-home sleep testing: if high clinical suspicion for OSA and
no significant cardiopulmonary comorbid conditions
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Which patients with OSA require treatment?
Counsel overweight patients about weight loss
Treat any nasal congestion
Advise alcohol avoidance close to bedtime
Offer trial of therapy (CPAP) if patient has
Daytime sleepiness or frequent nocturnal awakenings
Recent accident or near-miss attributable to sleepiness
Controversial: whether to treat asymptomatic patients
with mild or moderate OSA
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What is the role of weight loss and
exercise?
Helps reduce severity and symptoms
Recommend dietary modification
Recommend regular exercise
Bariatric surgery can reduce severity in morbidly obese
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Can OSA be effectively managed by
alterations in sleep position?
If AHI lower when nonsupine: avoid supine position
Up to 1/3 mild or moderate cases are position-dependent
Methods for adherence
Tennis ball strapped to back while sleeping
Wearable positional avoidance devices
Monitors or alarms
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
How should CPAP be initiated?
CPAP prescription should include:
Pressure setting
Mask type and size
Heated humidifier
Associated supplies (tube, filters, mask straps)
Traditionally: in-lab overnight titration study
Alternative for uncomplicated OSA: autotitrating CPAP
Educate patients on equipment, maintenance, care
Also: on benefits of therapy and potential problems
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What amount of CPAP use constitutes
sufficient adherence?
Patients should use CPAP whenever they sleep
CMS: adequate CPAP use ≥4 h/night on 70% of nights
Linear relationship between hours of CPAP use and
improvements in:
Sleepiness
Quality of life
Blood pressure
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What factors can optimize patient
adherence to CPAP therapy?
Early follow-up (within 1–2 weeks of therapy initiation)
Support groups and bed partner support
Cognitive behavioral therapy focused on CPAP
Aid in therapy goal-setting
Support in troubleshooting difficulties
Heated humidification + nasal steroid for congestion
Other PAP modes if patient has intolerance to pressure
Short-term sedative hypnotic (for select patients only)
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
How should CPAP masks be chosen?
No one mask type is superior to another
Select mask to maximize patient comfort
Oronasal (“full face”) masks
Patients who sleep with their mouth open
Nasal masks
Better tolerated with claustrophobia
Nasal pillows (sit under the nose and fit in the nares)
Also better tolerated with claustrophobia
Patients with unusual nasal bridge anatomy, facial hair, or
absent dentition
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What is the role of mandibular
advancement devices?
Decrease airway collapsibility and enlarge upper airway
Requires adequate dentition, may exacerbate TMJ
Refer to experienced dentist (sleep dentistry accreditation)
Less effective than CPAP for normalizing the AHI
Mild or moderate OSA: May be reasonable initial therapy
Severe OSA: Not recommended as initial therapy
Patients tend to accept better than CPAP
Follow-up sleep study needed to document adequacy
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What is the role of surgical intervention?
Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP)
Small reduction in symptoms
Fewer than half of patients have reduction in severity
Tonsillectomy, nasal septoplasty
Increase CPAP tolerability + reduce snoring (not cure)
Maxillomandibular advancement
Invasive procedure with prolonged postop recovery
Cure rate >90%, particularly in nonobese with retrognathia
Tracheostomy
Cures OSA
Can be used in life-threatening situations
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
How should treatment be monitored?
Ensure CPAP use during all sleep sessions
Assess symptom resolution
Monitor side effects of CPAP
Assess comorbid conditions associated with OSA
Monitor remission due to weight loss or surgery
Monitor remission in those with history drowsy driving
If relapse occurs, investigate stepwise:
Inadequate therapy adherence
Problems with CPAP delivery
Change in pressure needs
Non-OSA sleep factors
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
How should OSA be treated when a patient
is admitted to the hospital?
Patients should use their CPAP or MAD in the hospital
Just as they would at home
Use sedative and opiate medications cautiously
If moderate sedation used intraoperatively
Monitor ventilation by continuous oximetry and continuous
capnography
Consider CPAP administration during sedation
Beware untreated OSA in periop setting
Higher rate cardiopulmonary complications, ICU transfers
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
When should a sleep specialist be
consulted for management?
Complicated management situations
CPAP-intolerance
Persistent symptoms despite therapy
Multiple sleep disorders
Complex sleep-disordered breathing
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
What should patients know about the
effects of medications and supplemental
oxygen?
Use sedatives and opiates cautiously (can worsen OSA)
Exogenous testosterone may exacerbate or induce OSA
Don’t use supplemental oxygen as primary therapy
Treats oxyhemoglobin desaturation associated with OSA
Little evidence that it reduces symptoms, BP, CV risk
Some patients require both CPAP and supplemental oxygen
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
Can treatment prevent or modify outcomes
in other diseases?
CPAP and MAD therapy reduce blood pressure
Degree of adherence correlates with BP response
CPAP therapy may reduce hypertension
Effect of therapy on cardiovascular outcomes unclear
Other diseases may be modified by OSA therapy
May modestly increase ejection fraction in CHF
May reduce likelihood of Afib recurrence
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.
CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Treatment...
Conservative measures: weight loss, avoid alcohol at bedtime
Patients who require CPAP, other therapy (MAD, surgery)
Symptomatic or severe OSA
OSA-related drowsy driving
Benefits of adequate adherence to therapy
Symptom resolution
Reduced cardiovascular risk
© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014
Ann Int Med. 161 (5): ITC5-1.