Obstructive Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sedation in Patients at Risk for Sleep-induced Upper Airway Collapse
Overview of Protocol:
Between Subject - Repeated Measures design will be used to assess the airway response of two
groups of subjects under two different sedated conditions. Each group will be comprised of
six subjects and will be categorized according to their baseline profile for risk for SDB (<
10 RDI or > 25 RDI). Some subjects will have been prescribed continuous positive airway
pressure (CPAP) therapy by their treating physician as a result of their overnight sleep
study. CPAP treatment is effective in splinting the airway open and thus decreasing the
incident of airway collapse during sleep. Thus, CPAP utilization will also be tracked as an
independent and continuous variable as regular CPAP use has been found to be associated with
increased resistance to UAC (upper airway collapse).
The experimental conditions will evaluate upper airway patency and instability in response
to two forms of intravenous sedation: propofol and dexmedetomidine.
Subjects will be continuously monitored during each experimental condition for respiratory
effort and flow, and for EEG, EMG, and ECG.
Respiratory instability will first be assessed while subjects are under sedation without any
airway provocation. The degree of respiratory instability will be quantified in terms of the
following measurements: a modified Respiratory Disturbance Index (RDIsedated), respiratory
arousals, and minute ventilation. The apneic periods will be classified by their mixture of
central and obstructive components.All outcome measurements are assessed over the period of
sedation which last for approximately one hour.
Upper airway patency will be quantified in terms of the critical pharyngeal pressure (Pcrit)
(the pressure beyond which complete upper airway collapse occurs, see background).
The propensity to experience sleep disordered-breathing (SDB) is controlled by the interplay
of anatomic factors (i.e. BMI, neck circumference, retrognathia) and neurological drive
(sleep stage, arousal). The interaction of baseline anatomic factors and drug-induced
altered neurologic drive may also convey a risk for upper airway collapse (UAC) in patients
receiving analgesics, or sedation/anesthesia.1;2 While there is mainly only anecdotal
evidence to support the proposition that SDB is a strong predictor of sedation-related
adverse events,3;4 there is such a remarkable consensus of opinion regarding this
association that, for example, the American Society of Anesthesiologists is developing
guidelines to specifically address the issue of managing this group of "at risk" patients
who are to undergo sedation or anesthesia. SDB is a term that is used to describe a spectrum
of sleep-related breathing disturbances. Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a condition that
incorporates SDB with daytime symptoms (i.e. hypersomnolence). These terms are commonly used
interchangeably.
At this juncture, what is needed are clear demonstrations: 1) that SDB confers risk for
sedation-related adverse events (epidemiologically and/or experimentally), 2) of the patient
and drug factors that moderate/mediate the risk, and 3) of the mechanisms responsible for
the patient by drug interactions.
This proposed project will, in a preliminary way, address the first and second of these
issues. Specifically, the upper airway characteristics of patients with different severity
classifications of SDB will be assessed while under the influence of two,
neuropharmacologically distinct, intravenous sedatives.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator)
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