Objectives: To determine the occurrence and frequency of nocturnal upper airway obstruction in hypothyroidism.
Design: A case-control study of patients with newly diagnosed hypothyreosis and euthyroid subjects who had been selected from the population register. The subjects underwent sleep recordings with a static-charge-sensitive bed (SCSB).
Setting: Turku University Hospital and Research and Development Unit, Social Insurance Institution, Turku, Finland.
Subjects: Twenty six consecutive patients underwent sleep recordings with SCSB and a pulse oximeter. One hundred and eighty-eight euthyroid subjects who were previously studied with the SCSB were used as controls.
Main outcome measures: In a multivariate analysis, hypothyroidism, gender, age, and body mass index (BMI) were considered as predictors for the occurrence of nocturnal breathing abnormalities.
Results: Nocturnal breathing abnormalities were frequent in both groups. Fifty per cent of the hypothyroid patients and 29.3% of the control subjects had at least some episodes of partial or complete upper airway obstruction (P = 0.04). Severe obstruction with episodes of repetitive apnoea was present in 7.7% of the patients and in 1.5% of the controls. The multivariate analysis revealed that the presence of hypothyroidism did not significantly (P = 0.06), and independently of age, BMI or gender, predict nocturnal breathing abnormalities, whereas obesity (P < 0.0001) and male gender (P = 0.0001) were independent and significant predictors.
Conclusions: The incidence of nocturnal upper airway obstruction is increased in hypothyroidism, but is related to obesity and male gender rather than to hypothyroidism per se.