Author:
Carberry Jayne C.,Fisher Lauren P.,Grunstein Ronald R.,Gandevia Simon C.,McKenzie David K.,Butler Jane E.,Eckert Danny J.
Abstract
Hypnotics are contraindicated in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) because of concerns of pharyngeal muscle relaxation and delayed arousal worsening hypoxaemia. However, human data are lacking. This study aimed to determine the effects of three common hypnotics on the respiratory arousal threshold, genioglossus muscle responsiveness and upper airway collapsibility during sleep.21 individuals with and without OSA (18–65 years) completed 84 detailed sleep studies after receiving temazepam (10 mg), zolpidem (10 mg), zopiclone (7.5 mg) and placebo on four occasions in a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial (ACTRN12612001004853).The arousal threshold increased with zolpidem and zopicloneversusplacebo (mean±sd−18.3±10 and −19.1±9versus−14.6±7 cmH2O; p=0.02 and p<0.001) but not with temazepam (−16.8±9 cmH2O; p=0.17). Genioglossus muscle activity during stable non-REM sleep and responsiveness during airway narrowing was not different with temazepam and zopicloneversusplacebo but, paradoxically, zolpidem increased median muscle responsiveness three-fold during airway narrowing (median −0.15 (interquartile range −1.01 to −0.04)versus−0.05 (−0.29 to −0.03)% maximum EMG per cmH2O epiglottic pressure; p=0.03). The upper airway critical closing pressure did not change with any of the hypnotics.These doses of common hypnotics have differential effects on the respiratory arousal threshold but do not reduce upper airway muscle activity or alter airway collapsibility during sleep. Rather, muscle activity increases during airway narrowing with zolpidem.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
NeuroSleep, a NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence
Publisher
European Respiratory Society (ERS)
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Cited by
59 articles.
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