View clinical trials related to Obstructive Sleep Apnea of Child.
Filter by:This research study aims to find out if a single oral dose of steroid after tonsillectomy will reduce pain and decrease the need for narcotic medications.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a disease characterized by repeated partial or complete upper airway collapse during sleep, accompanied by arousals or oxygen desaturation. It was reported to affect 5.7 %~9.6 % of pediatric population in western countries and 5.5 %~7.8 % in China. Children's physical developing and brain functioning as well as quality of life (QoL) could be greatly impaired if the disease was left untreated. Polysomnography (PSG) was recognized as gold standard for diagnosing OSA. However, for pediatric OSA, there exists dispute on the PSG diagnostic criteria. Pediatric OSA was mostly caused by hypertrophy of adenoid or palatine tonsillar. For those PSG validated patients, nonsurgical management was often prescribed, in addition, surgical intervention, i.e. adenotonsillectomy was also commonly applied and had been proved efficient both in terms of PSG and in terms of symptoms, behaviors and QoL rated by caregivers. However, for children with controversial diagnoses by ATS and ICSD-3, little was known about whether surgical or nonsurgical management was effective. We aim at investigating the effect of adenotonsillectomy versus nonsurgical management on QoL in these subjects. And the hypothesis is that adenotonsillectomy improves QoL better than nonsurgical management in children with controversial diagnoses of OSA by ATS and ICSD-3.
The investigators wish to study the role of persistent markers of inflammation in executive function in young children during critical periods of synaptogenesis (ages 2-3). While the role of markers of inflammation have been validated in the pathogenesis in multiple disorders in the adult population, their study in pediatrics is limited. The investigators therefore propose that demonstration of persistent cytokine inflammatory markers in this preliminary study will allow larger studies to proceed.
The objective of this trial is to determine whether an opioid-free general anesthetic (OFA) technique utilizing ketamine, dexmedetomidine, lidocaine, and gabapentin can help reduce postoperative respiratory depression in the post-anesthesia care unit and ward in children with sleep-disordered breathing undergoing tonsillectomy when compared with traditional opioid-containing techniques. It is expected that this OFA regimen will have a measurable reduction on postoperative respiratory depression in children with sleep-disordered breathing.
Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a common disease in both adults and children and is caused by the obstruction of the upper airway during sleep. Unlike adults, most cases of paediatric SDB are due to the presence of enlarged tonsils and adenoids, thus the main treatment option is adenotonsillectomy (AT). It is well known that obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in adults increases the risk for hypertension, coronary artery disease and stroke, and there is now mounting evidence that SDB also has a significant impact on the cardiovascular system in children with reports of elevated blood pressure, endothelial dysfunction and altered autonomic cardiovascular control. Oxidative stress seems to play a pivotal role in impairing flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and consequently enhancing cardiovascular risk in SDB patients but the underlying mechanism is still undefined. Previously, we demonstrated that endothelial dysfunction is directly related to NADPH oxidase activation. Furthermore, recently we assessed the association between OSA, endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress in adults showing that increased NADPH oxidase-generated oxidative stress and arterial dysfunction are partially reversed by nasal continuous positive airway pressure treatment. There is evidence in literature that cardiovascular morbidities associated with SDB are potentially reversible in children; AT may have a significant role in reversing the cardiovascular sequelae of SDB (e.g. children with OSA). Nowadays, there aren't studies that analyzed the role of NADPH oxidase-generated oxidative stress in SDB children. The purpose of the current research project is to examine the role of NADPH oxidase activity, oxidative stress, inflammation and endothelial function in SDB children, understanding the mechanisms involved in this disease. Furthermore we will analyse the effect of a AT on inflammation, oxidative stress, NADPH oxidase activity and endothelial function in SDB children.