Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development of a Sideward Turning Beds to Treat Positional Obstructive Sleep Apnea
The aim of this feasibility study is to compare different settings of a custom-made automated
bed with respect to their ability to induce a change in the sleeping position of the user. In
particular, it is of interest whether the bed mechanism is able to change the position of a
user from supine to lateral position. At the same time, the investigators want to know
whether the intervention provided by the bed results in an arousal in sleeping users. In
addition, feasibility of detecting the position of the user using the un-obtrusive pressure
sensors, which are integrated in the bed, will be assessed.
Within the experiment, the investigators will identify participants that are sleeping mainly
in supine position by doing an acti-watch based screening measurement in their home setting.
Those participants who are sleeping in supine position for more than 12.5% of the home
recording with the acti-watch will be invited to come to the lab for one night measurement.
The experimenter will trigger interventions of the bed manually when the participant is lying
in supine position. The investigators will evaluate the position change using infrared
cameras and the built in sensors of the bed. Furthermore, a commercially available
home-measurement device to record polysomnography will be used to evaluate whether the
intervention caused arousals.
Obstructive positional sleep apnea
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is characterised by a repetitive collapse of the upper airway
during sleep, which results in apnea or hypopnoea associated with oxygen desaturations and
arousals. OSA affects up to 30% of the adult male population, increases with age, and is
associated with daytime sleepiness, increased risk of traffic accidents, arterial
hypertension, vascular dysfunction and cardiovascular events. In 56% to 75% percent of these
apnea patients, the apnea-hypopnea index is correlating with the body position. This subgroup
of patients suffers from position-dependent sleep apnea, which is defined by a difference in
the apnea hypopnea index between supine position and non-supine positions of at least 50%.
Current treatment recommendation for OSA is continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
ventilation, because of its potential beneficial impact on cardiovascular outcomes. However,
a recent randomised controlled trial has not shown reduction in major cardiovascular
endpoints in OSA patients with manifest cardiovascular disease allocated to CPAP. Therefore,
the beneficial effect of CPAP treatment has been subject to extensive discussion recently.
Furthermore, in mildly and moderately affected patients, compliance is sometimes limited due
to various side effects. A valuable alternative, which has been suggested for these patients,
is the so-called positional therapy. The aim of the therapy is to make the supine position
uncomfortable so that patients actively avoid it. However, due to interruption of the sleep
because of acoustic signals or an obstacle fixes at the patients back, current treatment
options are associated with low long term compliance.
Mechanisms for turning a sleeping user sideward
In literature, several mechanisms have been proposed to shift the sleeping user of a bed form
supine to lateral position. In general, these methods can be sorted into the following four
categories:
1. Inclination of one side of the mattress
2. Tilting of the mattress around a middle axis
3. Using pressurized air chambers to reconfigure the mattress shape
4. Using vibration or disturbing stimuli as aversion therapy when the person is sleeping on
the back Method number 4 does require active participation of the user and would
therefore have the same limitations as conventional positional therapy. However, method
1 to 3 are promising candidates for an intelligent anti-sleep apnea bed.
Methods
In order to compare the three methods described above a custom-made automated bed that has a
pressurized air-mattress and provides the ability either to incline half of the bed surface
up to 70° or tilt the whole surface up to 45° was developed. The purpose of this study is to
evaluate which of these three mechanisms is more effective in changing the position of the
user from supine to lateral. Furthermore, the settings which are most likely to induce a
position change will be determined. In addition, it will be evaluated which test settings
cause the least arousals in sleeping users. Evaluating this in healthy participants is an
important step on our way towards an intelligent bed for treatment of position dependent
obstructive sleep apnea.
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