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Eur Respir J 2004; 24:980-986
Copyright ©ERS Journals Ltd 2004

Frontal brain lobe impairment in obstructive sleep apnoea: a proton MR spectroscopy study

M. Alchanatis1, N. Deligiorgis1, N. Zias1, A. Amfilochiou2, E. Gotsis3, A. Karakatsani1 and A. Papadimitriou4

1 Sleep Laboratory, Pulmonary Dept, University of Athens Medical School, "SOTIRIA" Hospital for Diseases of the Chest, 2 Sleep Laboratory, "Sismanoglio" Hospital, and 3 Encephalos Institute, Athens, and 4 +Neurology Dept, University of Thessalia MedicalSchool, Larissa, Greece

CORRESPONDENCE: M. Alchanatis, 10, Bakopoulou Str., 154 51 Athens, Greece. Fax: 30 2107770423. E-mail: annakara@otenet.gr

Keywords: Cerebral metabolism, proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, sleep apnoea syndrome

Received: November 15, 2003
Accepted August 12, 2004

Patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome frequently have cognitive deficits, especially related to executive functions, which cannot be fully explained by daytime sleepiness and are partial irreversible after nasal continuous positive airway pressure treatment. The causal mechanism of these cognitive deficits is not yet known, but it has been proposed that they are associated with chemical and structural brain cell injury. The aim of this study was to investigate brain metabolism in patients with sleep apnoea syndrome.

Twenty-two patients with severe sleep apnoea and 10 healthy volunteers of comparable age were studied using single voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Magnetic resonance spectra were obtained from prefrontal cortex, parieto-occipital and frontal periventricular white matter.

N-acetylaspartate-to-creatine and choline-to-creatine ratios were significantly lower in the frontal white matter of obstructive sleep apnoea patients when compared to controls. Absolute concentrations of N-acetylaspartate and choline were also significantly reduced in the frontal white matter of patients with sleep apnoea.

Frontal lobe white matter lesions are known to be associated with cognitive executive dysfunction. The findings of this study may offer an explanation for the sometimes irreversible cognitive deficits associated with sleep apnoea.




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