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Depts of 1 Medicine, and 3 Otolaryngology, Queen's University, and 2 Sleep Laboratory, and 4 Research Development Office, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, ON, Canada
CORRESPONDENCE: M. F. Fitzpatrick, Division of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Queen's University, 102 Stuart Street, Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6, Canada. Fax: 1 6135491459. E-mail: mf19@post.queensu.ca
Keywords: Mouth breathing, nasal obstruction, sleep apnoea, treatment
Received: April 17, 2004
Accepted October 8, 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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A randomised single blind placebo- and sham-controlled crossover study of treatment (topical decongestant and external dilator strip) for nasal obstruction was carried out in 10 patients (nine males; mean±SEM 46±5 yrs) with nasal obstruction and OSA. All patients had normal acoustic pharyngometry. The effect of treatment on nasal resistance, mouth breathing during sleep and OSA severity was quantified.
Treatment of nasal obstruction was associated with a dramatic and sustained reduction in nasal resistance and the oral fraction of ventilation during sleep (mean (95% confidence interval) absolute reduction in oral fraction 30% (1249)). Improvements in sleep architecture were observed during active treatment, and there was a modest reduction in OSA severity (change in apnoeahypopnoea index 12 (322)).
In conclusion, treating nasal obstruction reduced mouth breathing during sleep and obstructive sleep apnoea severity, but did not effectively alleviate obstructive sleep apnoea.
Under normal circumstances, breathing during sleep is primarily nasal rather than oral 1, and considerable evidence has accumulated that nasal obstruction predisposes to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). Individuals describing nasal congestion due to allergy have shown a higher prevalence of OSA than those who do not 2. Nasal resistance is an independent predictor of snoring severity 3, and is higher among snorers with OSA than among snorers without OSA 4. Experimental occlusion of the nasal airway has been shown to induce sleep apnoea among normal subjects 58. Similarly, seasonal allergic rhinitis is associated with an increased number of obstructive apnoeas during sleep 9.
However, despite this well-documented association, the effect of treating nasal obstruction on OSA severity has been highly variable. Mechanical nasal valvar splints have been studied in snoring 10, upper airway resistance syndrome 11 and OSA 1218. Although nasal splints were associated with a reduction in snoring frequency and/or intensity in three of these studies 10, 13, 16, the effect on sleep apnoea severity was variable and generally disappointing. Similarly, topical nasal decongestants did not reduce OSA severity in patients with nasal obstruction 19, 20, but the use of topical nasal steroids in patients with allergic rhinitis was associated with improved subjective sleep quality in adults 21 and with an improvement in apnoeahypopnoea index (AHI) from 10.7 to 5.8 in children 22. Nasal surgeries have also been used to treat OSA, but the results have been inconsistent and often lacked adequate objective outcome measurements 2325. However, Series et al. 26 demonstrated that the absence of pharyngeal narrowing (as measured by the posterior airway space) in patients with OSA delineated a group with a better response to nasal surgery.
In this study, the hypothesis was that relief of nasal obstruction in patients with OSA and a normal retroglossal airway would lead to a reduction in mouth breathing during sleep, and, hence, provide effective treatment for OSA syndrome.
| METHODS |
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Nasal resistance (posterior active rhinometry 1) was measured in erect and supine positions at the start and end of each overnight study.
Full polysomnography was conducted from 00:00 h until 07:00 h, or until the subject requested that the study be terminated. Respiratory events were scored using standard criteria 27.
Oral and nasal ventilation were simultaneously measured using a mask (7900 series; Hans Rudolph, Kansas City, MO, USA; dead space 31.3 mL) with independent nasal and oral compartments, which was customised, as described previously 28, to eliminate any restriction to mouth opening. Identical pneumotachs (3700 series; Hans Rudolph; dead space 13.87 mL) were inserted into the oral and nasal ports of the face mask. Each pneumotach was attached to a separate research pneumotach system (HSS100HR; Hans Rudolph) that provided a digital output (40 Hz sampling frequency) of nasal/oral breath-by-breath tidal volume, interfaced with the computerised polysomnographic montage. Air leaks, and communication between the oral and nasal compartments of the face mask were meticulously excluded as per the usual routine 1.
Patients
In total, 10 patients were studied (nine males; mean±SD (range) 46±5 yrs (1863); body mass index 27±1.5 kg·m2 (2337)). The inclusion criteria were as follows: 1) OSA syndrome 27 not yet receiving treatment; 2) clinically significant nasal obstruction (on the basis of clinical examination by M.F. Fitzpatrick) caused by turbinate mucosal enlargement with or without dynamic inspiratory collapse at the nasal valve; and 3) a normal retroglossal airway dimension at physical examination and acoustic pharyngometry 29. Exclusion criteria included the presence of lung disease, or the use of medications known to alter nasal resistance.
Statistical analysis
Sleep apnoea severity (AHI) was analysed using the standard method for the two-period crossover study as described by Fleiss 30. In addition to the primary test of treatment effect, tests were performed for period and ordering (differential carry-over) effects. The analysis of oral fraction during quiet sleep and during obstructive events was performed using a mixed model with random effects for subject and subject night. This method allowed the use of multiple measurements per subject night, while testing for the within-subject effects of body position, sleep stage and treatment.
| RESULTS |
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Sleep stage architecture
Table 2
demonstrates the change in sleep-stage architecture with treatment. Despite the encumbrance of the oronasal mask and pneumotach system, significant improvements in sleep architecture (reduced stage 1 sleep, increased sleep efficiency, increased REM and slow-wave sleep) were observed with relief of nasal obstruction.
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| DISCUSSION |
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1) This study included objective measurement of nasal resistance in the recumbent position, the usual sleeping position, pre- and post-treatment of nasal obstruction in patients with OSA. This is important because nasal resistance increases significantly on moving from the erect to the recumbent position even in normal subjects, and the postural effect is further amplified in patients with pre-existing nasal obstruction 33, 34. This aspect addresses a possible confounding factor in previous studies, i.e. that the increase in nasal resistance associated with recumbency could have offset the benefit of the treatment given to relieve nasal obstruction.
2) A single post-intervention measurement of nasal resistance has usually been reported as the evidence for efficacy of treatment for nasal obstruction in studies examining the effect of treatment of nasal obstruction on OSA severity. As OSA severity tends to increase over time during the night, independent of sleep stage or position, it was important to verify continuing efficacy of the active treatment for the duration of the overnight sleep study. In the current study, nasal resistance remained markedly elevated through the placebo night, but was reduced to within normal limits from 20 min post-treatment until the end of the overnight recording during the active treatment night. Hence, the modest nature of the improvement in OSA severity on active treatment could not be attributed to loss of the treatment effect over time on the active night.
3) This is the first time that oronasal partitioning of ventilation has been described during sleep, before and after relief of nasal obstruction. The current study demonstrates that nasal obstruction is associated with a greater proportion of mouth breathing at night, a finding that might seem intuitively obvious. However, it is remarkable that, even in the presence of very severe nasal obstruction in the current study, ventilation remained predominantly nasal in this group of patients; that is, patients continued to inspire through the high nasal resistance rather than bypassing it by switching to pure mouth breathing! This finding implies a major mechanical disadvantage of the oral breathing route in these patients and is consistent with the recent finding of a
2.5-fold increase in upper airway resistance during sleep while mouth breathing as compared with nasal breathing in normal subjects 28. Hence, in order to confer a mechanical advantage to pure mouth breathing during sleep, very severe (subtotal) nasal obstruction may be necessary.
4) The inclusion criteria in the current study were designed to select a patient group that the present authors, and others 26, felt might reasonably respond to relief of nasal obstruction as a treatment for OSA: these patients each had clinically important nasal obstruction, but did not have any evidence of anatomical compromise at the retroglossal level. The relatively poor response of OSA to normalising nasal resistance in this selected patient group is disappointing and provides powerful evidence against simple mechanical relief of nasal obstruction as a sole treatment for moderate or severe OSA, in the short term at least.
5) In the current study, the oral fraction fell from mean 39% during sleep in the placebo/sham condition to mean 8% (a level that is within normal limits 1) with effective relief of nasal obstruction. This abrupt change in the oral fraction during sleep, in association with a fall in nasal resistance during a single night, implies that the degree of mouth breathing during sleep is determined primarily by the nasal resistance and not by behavioural factors. The patients in this study considered themselves to be predominantly mouth breathers during sleep, but on objective testing were actually predominantly nose breathers, despite having a higher than normal nasal resistance. This subjective judgment is notoriously inaccurate, even during wakefulness 35. Hence, self-reports of mouth breathing during sleep are not a reliable indication of predominant mouth breathing.
Given the profound reduction in oral fraction observed with treatment, a greater reduction in OSA severity than that observed in the current study might have been expected. Interestingly, no trend towards a greater treatment effect in mild OSA was evident. The reduction in mouth breathing during sleep into the normal range in the current study, without a clinically important improvement in sleep apnoea severity, implies that mouth breathing per se may not be a critical factor in the presence or absence of OSA, but may simply be a surrogate marker for increased propensity to OSA.
Explanations for this relative disparity between improvement in the nasal airway and improvement in OSA severity, in the absence of corresponding objective data, are speculative. Certainly, in the current study, there was no clear systematic shift from mouth breathing to pure nasal breathing during obstructive events and, as figure 2
demonstrates, there was considerable within-patient variation in the breathing route from time to time, even within a given sleep stage and position. The current study did not measure jaw opening during sleep. It is possible that patients with chronic nasal obstruction could have greater habitual jaw opening during sleep, thus rendering the upper airway more collapsible 36, and that this habitual jaw posture during sleep might not revert to normal immediately after treatment of nasal obstruction. A disparity between mouth opening and mouth breathing has long been described, such that subjects with an open mouth may habitually breathe predominantly via the nose 35. In such a scenario, it would be possible for individuals with nasal obstruction to reduce their oral ventilatory fraction in response to a reduction in nasal resistance, yet still suffer increased susceptibility to upper airway obstruction during sleep through persistent jaw opening. Indeed, patients with OSA have been shown to have greater jaw opening during sleep than normal subjects 37, and progressively greater jaw opening during obstructive sleep apnoeic events 38.
Another possible explanation for the disparity between reduction in mouth breathing and reduction in sleep apnoea severity is impaired function of nasal mucosal afferents in association with rhinitis, which might not recover immediately after simple relief of mucosal hyperaemia and oedema. Although nasal breathing consistently increases activation of the alae nasi, it is uncertain whether nasal afferents have any specific role in activation of the genioglossus or other pharyngeal dilator muscles 39, 40.
Patients in the current study experienced significant improvements in sleep architecture (improved sleep efficiency, less stage 1 sleep and more stage 2 sleep, slow-wave sleep and REM sleep) during the active treatment night as compared with the placebo/sham night, despite a relatively modest improvement in sleep apnoea severity with the active treatment. Others have also demonstrated a reduction in sleep fragmentation with treatment of nasal obstruction, even in the absence of any significant improvement in sleep apnoea severity 20, 25, 41. Hence, the improvement in sleep architecture observed in the current study may relate more to a reduction in nasal discomfort with the active treatment rather than to improvement in sleep apnoea severity alone. An improvement in subjective sleep quality with relief of nasal obstruction, similar to that observed in the current study, has also been reported previously by other authors 21.
The current study has certain deficiencies. In particular, it is a short-term study: the effect of relieving nasal obstruction for a single night. It is possible that the longer-term effect of relieving nasal obstruction on OSA severity might be different. Having said that, it is difficult to discern any such trend in treatment effect with time, based on existing literature. Versa and Pirsig 42 have recently reviewed the outcome of nasal surgery as a treatment for OSA in nine studies (102 patients in total) that included pre-operative and post-operative measurement of AHI. The follow-up periods varied from 1 month to 44 months, and there was no evident trend to improved outcomes with longer follow-up.
As mentioned earlier, the current study did not include measurement of jaw position. Technically, jaw position could not have been measured in the current study using either of the previously published methods because of concern that an oral appliance 38 might alter oronasal distribution of ventilation and, specifically, that a strain gauge 37 might impose a restriction on mouth opening.
The inclusion criterion included a normal retroglossal airway dimension on acoustic pharyngometry. While this is a reproducible test 43 with available normative data 29, the measurements are made during wakefulness and in the erect seated position, and, therefore, do not reflect the physiological change observed with recumbency and sleep. Hence, individuals with a normal retroglossal dimension while awake may not be protected from retroglossal compromise while asleep.
The total sleep time in the current study was quite short, averaging only 4.55 h. This was undoubtedly due to the rather cumbersome recording apparatus required to measure oral and nasal partitioning of ventilation during sleep, in addition to all of the other routine polysomnographic data. However, despite the relative brevity of sleep duration, it was fortunate that each patient had stages 1, 2, slow-wave sleep and REM sleep during both study nights, so that a valid comparison could be made between active treatment and the placebo/sham condition.
In conclusion, this study demonstrated that relief of nasal obstruction is associated with normalisation of mouth breathing during sleep, improved sleep architecture and a modest improvement in obstructive sleep apnoea severity. However, the improvement in obstructive sleep apnoea severity with relief of nasal obstruction was not sufficient to provide clinically effective treatment.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| REFERENCES |
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