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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of applied physiology >Alteration in upper airway dilator muscle coactivation during sleep: comparison of patients with obstructive sleep apnea and healthy subjects
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Alteration in upper airway dilator muscle coactivation during sleep: comparison of patients with obstructive sleep apnea and healthy subjects

机译:睡眠期间上气道扩张肌肌的改变:阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停和健康受试者患者的比较

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摘要

In patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), substantial increases in genioglossus (GG) activity during hypopneas/apneas usually fail to restore normal airflow. We have previously suggested that sleep-induced alteration in tongue muscle coordination may explain this finding, as retractor muscle coactivation was reduced during sleep compared with wakefulness. The present study was undertaken to evaluate whether these alterations in dilator muscle activation during sleep play a role in the pathogenesis of OSA and whether coactivation of additional peripharyngeal muscles (non-GG muscles: styloglossus, geniohyoid, sternohyoid, and sternocleidomastoid) is also impaired during sleep. We compared GG and non-GG muscle electromyographic (EMG) activity in 8 patients with OSA and 12 healthy subjects during wakefulness while breathing through inspiratory resistors with the activity observed during sleep toward the end of flow limitation, before arousal, at equivalent esophageal pressures. During wakefulness, resistive breathing triggered increases in both GG and non-GG muscle activity. During sleep, flow limitation was associated with increases in GG-EMG that reached, on average, 2-fold the level observed while awake. In contrast, EMGs of the non-GG muscles, recorded simultaneously, reached, on average, only similar to 2/3 the wakefulness level. We conclude that during sleep GG activity may increase to levels that substantially exceed those sufficient to prevent pharyngeal collapse during wakefulness, whereas other peripharyngeal muscles do not coactivate during sleep in both patients with OSA and healthy subjects. We speculate that upper airway muscle dyssynchrony during sleep may explain why GG-EMG activation fails to alleviate flow limitation and stabilize airway patency during sleep.
机译:在患有阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的患者中,低钠/难剂期间的Genioglossus(GG)活性的显着增加通常不能恢复正常气流。我们此前建议舌肌协调的睡眠诱导的改变可以解释这一发现,因为与清醒性相比,止动器肌肉共同减少。本研究进行了评估睡眠期间扩张肌肉激活的这些改变是否在OSA的发病机制中发挥作用,以及是否存在额外的突刺肌(非GG肌肉:Tuthoglossus,Genoyoid,胸蛋白和胸骨蛋白酶)的共同作用也受到损害睡觉。我们将GG和非GG肌肉肌科(EMG)活性与OSA和12名健康受试者的患者进行比较,同时通过吸入式电阻器呼吸在睡眠期间观察到的活性,以前在唤醒之前,在等效的食道压力下。在清醒期间,电阻呼吸触发GG和非GG肌肉活动的增加。在睡眠期间,流动限制与达到的GG-EMG的增加有关,平均而言,醒来的水平达到2倍。相反,非GG肌肉的EMG同时记录,平均仅达到2/3醒来水平。我们得出结论,在睡眠期间,GG活性可能会增加到大大超过那些足以预防咽喉瘫痪的水平的水平,而其他突袭肌肉在患有OSA和健康受试者的患者中也不会在睡眠期间共同激活。我们推测睡眠期间的上气道肌肉脱伴可以解释为什么GG-EMG激活不能减轻流量限制并在睡眠期间稳定气道通畅。

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