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Clinical Trial Summary

Breathing is one of the body's vital functions that occur under normal conditions using the nose. When humans breathe primarily through the mouth instead of the nose, this is referred to as mouth breathing. Snoring and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) occur frequently in mouth breathers. Mouth breathing impairs oral health, reduces quantity and quality of saliva, and increases dry mouth, risk of developing dental caries, gingival inflammation, bad breath and dry lips. Serious health conditions associated with an obstructed upper airway in those who snore include hypertension, cardiovascular disease and mild cognitive impairment. Oral appliances (OAs) that bring the lower jaw (mandible) forward have been shown to be highly effective in reducing snoring and interruptions in breathing (respiratory events) that occur in those who snore and/or have OSA. The myTAP™ OA (AMI, Dallas, TX) includes an optional mouth shield (MS) that is anticipated to promote nasal breathing. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of oral appliance plus mouth shield therapy on sleep cardio-respiratory dynamics (breathing and heart activity) and their effect on improving OSA and oral health, especially of the periodontal tissues, in confirmed mouth breathers who snore and/or have OSA. As many as 70 adults at least 18 years old will be recruited to participate. All participants will wear the OA during sleep for 8 weeks (Phase 1). Half of the participants will be randomly assigned to wear the OA only for the first 4 weeks; all will wear both the OA and MS for the last 4 weeks. Participants will wear an easy-to-use home sleep recording system (NOX T3) for 2 nights at the start of the study and again at 4 weeks and 8 weeks. Based on the investigators' experience, some participants will not have achieved maximal benefit from the OA at 8 weeks, and will require addition adjustment. These participants will enter a second phase of the study where they will have 1 or more sleep studies done at 2 week intervals, and will further adjust their OAs (that is, advance the mandible) to eliminate snoring.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Respiration is one of the body's vital functions that occurs under normal conditions using the nose. When nasal breathing is supplemented by or supplanted through the mouth, this is referred to as mouth breathing. Primary snoring and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are frequent findings in mouth breathers, regardless of age. In children, mouth breathing is often associated with enlarged adenoids and tonsils, changes in body posture, hyperactivity, attention deficit and impaired learning. In all ages, mouth breathing impairs oral health, reduces quantity and quality of saliva, and increases dry mouth, risk of developing dental caries, gingival inflammation, bad breath and dry lips. Symptoms associated with an obstructed upper airway in those who snore include hypertension, cardiovascular disease and mild cognitive impairment. There are currently no data on the effects of oral appliance plus mouth shield therapy on sleep cardio-respiratory dynamics and their effect on improving OSA and oral health, especially periodontal health, in mouth breathers. Methods: Evaluation of the effects of the FDA cleared MyTAP midline traction type oral appliance (OA; AMI, Dallas, TX) in combination with its FDA-cleared mouth shield (MS) in treating confirmed mouth breathers who snore and/or have OSA. Power analysis: Sample size (n=40) is based on a-posteriori power of 80% observed in the investigative team's recently completed randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing two OA designs. As many as 70 participants will be enrolled to account for drop-outs. Design: Single center, prospective randomized clinical trial using a parallel group design. Randomization: Using an online randomizer software, half of the subjects will be assigned to Group "OA plus MS 8wk", OA use with MS for 8-weeks and group "OA Alone 4wk" (no MS) for first 4-weeks. The OA Alone 4wk group will add MS use after 4-weeks and continue to use the combination for subsequent 4-weeks. Clinically standard periodontal exams will be performed at baseline (T0), after 4-weeks (T2) and after 8 weeks (T3). The dentist-fitted OA will be applied chair-side and adjusted to a starting position of 60% of the lower jaw's maximum comfortable protrusion. All participants will wear the OA nightly during sleep for 8-consecutive weeks. Subjects will be instructed to advance the jaw up to 0.5 mm every 2 nights (less frequently if needed to minimize transient discomfort). Subjects will use the EverSleep Wearable Sleep Tracker app (Somno Health Inc., Golden CO) on their smart phones to monitor their own snoring nightly, and self-titrate their OAs until no snore detection is reported by the software. Based on the investigators' recently completed study (IRB2017-0390) and another study published on this kind of appliance, some participants will not have achieved maximal benefit from the OA, and will require addition adjustment. These participants will enter Phase 2 of the study where they will have 1 or 2 more sleep studies done at 2 week intervals, and will further adjust their OAs (that is, advance their lower jaws) to eliminate snoring. The investigators will evaluate differences in sleep respiration events, snoring and other measures at all time points except T1. Periodontal exams (gums and supporting tissues) will be performed at T1-T3 and T5. Comparison will be done between and within group (that is, with and without the MS) . The purpose of collecting sleep data with OA use is to determine its success in promoting stable respiration during sleep and reducing the number of events in which breathing stops (apneas) or diminished (hypopneas) and the amount of oxygen in the blood is low (oxygen desaturation). The sleep recorder (NOX T3, Nox Medical , Reykjavík, Iceland) is a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared and certified for sale within the European Economic area (CE marked). The midline traction oral appliance (myTAP, AMI Inc., Dallas Texas) is currently marketed as a medical device to treat snoring and obstructive sleep apnea and is FDA cleared and CE marked. The EverSleep device (Somnohealth, Golden Colorado) is a wearable sleep coaching device and is not an FDA 510(k) cleared medical device. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04876625
Study type Interventional
Source Texas A&M University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date July 26, 2019
Completion date September 25, 2022

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