Prevalence of central sleep apnea in people with tetraplegic spinal cord injury: a retrospective analysis of research and clinical data

Author:

Graco Marnie123ORCID,Ruehland Warren R12,Schembri Rachel14,Churchward Thomas J12,Saravanan Krisha12,Sheers Nicole L123ORCID,Berlowitz David J123

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Breathing and Sleep, Austin Health , Heidelberg, VIC , Australia

2. Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine, Austin Health , Heidelberg, VIC , Australia

3. Department of Physiotherapy, University of Melbourne , Parkville, VIC , Australia

4. Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics Unit, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute , Melbourne, VIC , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives Over 80% of people with tetraplegia have sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), but whether this is predominantly obstructive or central is unclear. This study aimed to estimate the prevalence of central sleep apnea (CSA) in tetraplegia and the contributions of central, obstructive, and hypopnea respiratory events to SDB summary indices in tetraplegia. Methods Research and clinical data from 606 individuals with tetraplegia and full overnight polysomnography were collated. The proportions of different respiratory event types were calculated; overall and for mild, moderate, and severe disease. The prevalence of Predominant CSA (Central Apnea Index [CAI] ≥ 5 and more central than obstructive apneas) and Any CSA (CAI ≥ 5) was estimated. Prevalence of sleep-related hypoventilation (SRH) was estimated in a clinical sub-cohort. Results Respiratory events were primarily hypopneas (71%), followed by obstructive (23%), central (4%), and mixed apneas (2%). As severity increased, the relative contribution of hypopneas and central apneas decreased, while that of obstructive apneas increased. The prevalence of Predominant CSA and Any CSA were 4.3% (26/606) and 8.4% (51/606) respectively. Being male, on opiates and having a high tetraplegic spinal cord injury were associated with CSA. SRH was identified in 26% (26/113) of the clinical sub-cohort. Conclusions This is the largest study to characterize SDB in tetraplegia. It provides strong evidence that obstructive sleep apnea is the predominant SDB type; 9–18 times more prevalent than CSA. The prevalence of CSA was estimated to be 4%–8%, significantly lower than previously reported.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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