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Increasing Hypopnea in Sleep Breathing Disturbance Improves Postoperative Oxygen Saturation in Patients with Very Severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea
oleh: Ethan I. Huang, Shu-Yi Huang, Yu-Ching Lin, Chieh-Mo Lin, Chin-Kuo Lin, Ying-Chih Huang, Jian-An Su
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | MDPI AG 2020-09-01 |
Deskripsi
In patients of very severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with confined framework, reducing volume is difficult to achieve a postoperative apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) qualifying the classical surgical success. However, a higher AHI with a larger part of hypopneas may have similar or even less severity of oxygen (O<sub>2</sub>) desaturation, compared to a lower index mostly made of apneas. Here, in 27 consecutive enrolled patients, we show that besides the improvement of mean AHI, the multilevel surgery increased hypopnea in AHI from 29.1% to 77.3%, and improves postoperative O<sub>2</sub> saturation by reducing desaturation frequency (mean desaturation index decreased from 62.5 to 24.4 events/h) and level (mean oxyhemoglobin saturation of pulse oximetry (SpO<sub>2</sub>) desaturation cut down from 10.0 to 5.8%). The mean SpO<sub>2</sub> improved from 92.3% to 94.7%, and the improvement was positively related to the proportion increase of hypopnea/AHI. The results suggest that the non-framework surgery could help patients with very severe OSA whose AHIs are ≥60 events/h in terms of improving postoperative O<sub>2</sub> saturation. Due to the improvement also presented in those not qualified as classical surgical success, further studies are needed to clarify the connection between O<sub>2</sub> desaturation and various consequences to reconsider defining a surgical success.