1. Holistic Treatment Outcomes in OSA: Clinical Evidence for the SLEEP GOAL
- Author
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Brian W. Rotenberg, Edward B. Pang, and Kenny P. Pang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Epworth Sleepiness Scale ,Mood swing ,Polysomnography ,Irritability ,medicine.disease ,Sleep medicine ,nervous system diseases ,respiratory tract diseases ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Blood pressure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Nocturia ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a systemic disease that is due to upper airway collapse and obstruction during sleep, resulting in frequent hypoxia, sympathetic overdrive, tachycardia, nocturnal hypertension, and oxidative metabolic stress. Daytime symptoms include unrefreshed sleep, daytime tiredness, loss of memory, irritability, lack of concentration, poor work productivity, poor quality of life (QOL), mood swings, and even depression; nighttime symptoms include loud snoring, choking at night, gasping for air, frequent arousals, witnessed apneas, and nocturia. OSA can lead to systemic diseases like hypertension, cardiovascular events, myocardial infarct, and fatal arrhythmias. The “gold” standard test for OSA is commonly assigned as the level I overnight polysomnography (PSG). However, sleep specialists are aware of its shortcomings and the inconsistencies of the single parameter AHI (apnea-hypopnea index). It is widely known that there is discordance between AHI (that is used to denote outcomes/success of therapy) and real actual clinical outcomes such as QOL, patient perception of disease, cardiovascular measures, and/or survival. Recent studies have shown that the use of a single parameter AHI is inaccurate, inadequate, and unrealistic; sleep medicine needs to be more holistic to assess actual clinical treatment outcomes. As OSA is a systemic disease that affects all the end organs, outcome parameters should be those related to these end organ effects; some of these more holistic parameters (SLEEP GOAL) include snoring level, sleep latency, execution time, Epworth sleepiness scale, blood pressure, gross weight (BMI), oxygen duration below 90%, AHI, and QOL scores.
- Published
- 2021