OSA Flashcards

1
Q

OSA

what is OSA

A

Periodic reduction (hypopnea) or cessation (apnea) of breathing due to a narrowing or occlusion of the upper airway during sleep.

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2
Q

OSA

OSA epidemiology (age, sex, risk factors)

A
Age >65 
M > F
Risks: 
 - obesity
 - increased neck cirumference 
 - hypertension
 - hypothyroidism
 - post menopausal 
 - diabetes
 - alcohol
 - allergic rhinitis/tonsillar hypertrophy
 - meds 
 - fmhx 
 - genetics
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3
Q

OSA

complications

A
  • linked to traffic accidents, cardiac diseases, stroke, diabetes, and visceral obesity
  • associated with nocturnal cardiac arrhythmias, chronic and acute cardiac events
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4
Q

OSA

subjective hx

A
  • daytime sleepiness?
  • naps?
  • partner c/o snoring/gasping/snorting?
  • meds
  • ETOH
  • Epworth Sleepiness Scale
  • men: erectile dysfunction
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5
Q

OSA

ddx

A
  • Primary snoring
  • Narcolepsy
  • Restless leg syndrome
  • tonsillar hypertrophy
  • obesity hypoventilation syndrome
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6
Q

OSA

Dx criteria

A

15 or more apneas, hypopneas, or respiratory effort- related arousals per hour of sleep in an asymptomatic patient. >75% of the apneas and hypopneas must be obstructive.

5 or more obstructive apneas, obstructive hypopneas, or respiratory effort-related arousals per hour of sleep in a patient with symptoms or signs of disturbed sleep. >75% of the apneas or hypopneas must be obstructive.

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7
Q

OSA

Investigations

A

polysomnography (PSG) - glold standard

If unavailable - can screen w/overnight oximetry

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8
Q

OSA

Tx

A
  • lifestyle mods (weight loss 10-20%, smoking cessation, ETOH, sleep with elevated HOB)
  • CPAP/biPAP
  • dentist for appliance
  • surgical tx (last resort)
    - adenotonsillectomy (tonsillar or adenoid hypertrophy)
    - Tracheostomy can eliminate OSA but not central hypoventilation syndromes
    - Maxillomandibular advancement (MMA) when the patient cannot tolerate/refuses CPAP and an OA is not appropriate/effective.
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