Introduction : Respiratory events occurring under noninvasive ventilation (NIV) may produce sleep fragmentation. Alternatives to polysomnography should be validated for providing simple monitoring tools for patients treated at home with NIV. Objectives : To study the value of pulse wave amplitude (PWA) reduction as a surrogate marker of cortical micro-arousals associated with respiratory events occurring during NIV. Methods : 27 PSG tracings under NIV recorded in 9 stable OHS patients, under 3 different ventilator modes (no back-up rate, low or high back-up rate) were analyzed. For all respiratory events (obstructive, central, or mixed event), the association with EEG-micro-arousals, PWA reduction of more than 30% and the presence of associated SpO 2 desaturation > 4% was recorded. Results: 2474 respiratory events during NREM sleep were analyzed. 73.6% were associated with an EEG-MA, 91.4% with a > 4% decrease in SpO 2 , and 74.9% with a significant PWA reduction. Sensitivity of PWA for the detection of an EEG-micro-arousal related to a respiratory event was 89.1% 95%CI: 76.7-95.3. Positive predictive value (PPV) was 87.0% 95%CI: 75.0-94.0. Sensitivity of PWA was highest in the S mode, compared to both other S/T modes, p=<0.001. Sensitivity of PWA also improved with the magnitude of SpO 2 desaturations. Conclusions: PWA reduction is a sensitive marker with a high PPV for the detection of EEG-MA associated with respiratory events during NREM sleep in stable OHS patients treated by NIV. In this situation, PWA could be used to improve scoring of hypopneas and allow an appropriate assessment of sleep fragmentation related to respiratory events.
Adler et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: