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Which PAP device to which patient?

Which PAP device to which patient?. Claudio Rabec, MD FCCP Service de Pneumologie et Réanimation Respiratoire Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon. Breathing disorders in sleep. The international classification of sleep disorders ( ASSM, ICSD2, 2005). Other breathing disorders.

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Which PAP device to which patient?

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  1. Which PAP device to which patient? Claudio Rabec, MD FCCP Service de Pneumologie et Réanimation Respiratoire Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon

  2. Breathingdisorders in sleep The international classification of sleep disorders ( ASSM, ICSD2, 2005) Otherbreathingdisorders Sleep-relatedhypoxemia/hypoventilation OSA CSA Medicalconditions Idiopathic Cheyne Stokes Drug induced Adult Pediatric • Parenchymal • Neuromuscular • Thoracic cage Congénital: Ondine Course COPD UARS OHS Overlap: COPD + OSA OHS + OSA

  3. Normal inspiration SaO2 Flow Thx Abd 1

  4. Hypoventilation or SaO2 Flow Thx Abd

  5. Rhytmogenesis failure (central apneas) 1) Blunted ventilatory drive SaO2 Flow Thx Abd

  6. Rhytmogenesis failure (central apneas) 2) Ventilatory instability SaO2 Flow Thx Abd

  7. UA obstruction (obstructive apnea) SaO2 Flow Thx Abd 1

  8. SB NIV SB PS SBCPAP SBSB

  9. Sleep Apnea Abnormal respiratory events during sleep • Apneas • Hypopneas • RERA • Obstructive, central, mixed + Clinical signs

  10. 90 % of sleep apnea patients have an obstructive form (0SA)

  11. Normal flow Flow limitation Complete Obstruction

  12. OSA: Consequences of upperairwaysintermittentobstruction • Episodic “asphyxia” • Sleepfragmentation • Intermittenthypoxemia Sympathetichyperesponsiveness •  Episodes of intrathoracicdepression • Oxydative stress/endothelialdysfunction • Sleepiness •  Daytime fatigue •  Vascular complications

  13. OSA-related morbidity • Cardiovascular morbidity • Neurovascular morbidity • Hypertension • Arrhytmias • Motor vehicle and working accidents

  14. Severe OSATherapeutic options • Fixed CPAP • Auto CPAP • Cflex ™ /EPR ™ • “Alter” CPAP • Bilevel devices

  15. Severe OSATherapeutic options • Fixed CPAP • Auto CPAP • Cflex™ /EPR ™ • “Alter” CPAP • Bilevel devices

  16. CPAPHow it works?

  17. CPAP: How do it works? Treat apneas and hypopneas CPAPPneumatic splint • Presurize and stabilize UA • Additionaly increase FRC • obstructive • mixed • some central Sometimes improves hypercapnia Potential mechanisms • Treat respiratory events “reset” ventilatory drive • Increase FRC • Counterbalance AutoPEEP (mainy in COPD) • “Normalize” UA function

  18. Immediate effects • Improving sleep architecture • Reducing arousals • Reducing flow limitation • Reducing ou abolishing nocturnal respiratory events

  19. Long term effects • Improvement in daytime alertness • Normalization of sleep quality • Reduction of risks of motor vehicles and working accidents • Quality of life improvement • Reduction in risk of cardiovascular and neurovascular accidents • Improving survival?

  20. Stradling Thorax 2000

  21. 1) Hypertension Before CPAP After CPAP Pepperell Lancet 2002

  22. 2) Secondary stroke prevention Martinez Garcia; Chest 2005

  23. 3) Cardiovascularmorbidity

  24. 4) Sleepiness

  25. 5) Traffic accidents Teran Santos, NEJM 1999

  26. CPAP effective pressure Goals • Reducing arousals • Normalisingsleep architecture • Normalizing flow • Reducing ou abolishing nocturnal respiratoryevents Tools • Manualtitration • Full or "Split night" • Hoffstein formula • AutoCPAPdevices

  27. Severe OSATherapeutic options • Fixed CPAP • Auto CPAP • Cflex™ /EPR ™ • “Alter” CPAP • Bilevel devices

  28. What is an autoCPAP? • Auto CPAP machine (APAP) is a device commited to deliver a variable pressure • at a customized, regularly adjusted level • between a pre established rang • Designed to increase pressure in response to predetermined respiratory events • Use sophisticated algorithms to detect pressure requirements

  29. Rationale of AutoCPAP An individuals pressure profile varies over time • Over the same night • Body position • Sleep State (REM vs. NREM) • Overdifferentnights • Nasal congestion • Alcohol and sedative use • Sleepdeprivation  Fixed pressure does not accommodate for these changes

  30. Overnight

  31. … overdifferentnights

  32. APAP: some main questions… • Whatis the better signal to detectevents? • The methodused to evaluatethis signal isappropriate? • Is there an interest to reduce pressure levelovernight ?

  33. How an APAP works?Two different targets Flow Airwayresistance Pneumotach Forcedoscillationtechnique

  34. How an APAP works?1) Flow

  35. Estimating airway resistance by FOT Principle: to send high frequency - small pressure oscillation to test airway pattency Symetricpattern: Airways closed Asymetricpattern: Airways open

  36. Flow vs combined flow + FOT During partial airway collapsus • PTG (flow target) is able to responde to • Snoring • Flow limitation (then to react only to hypopneas with flow limitation)

  37. Flow alone vs combined flow + FOT During complete airway collapsus • There is not flow… how to classify apneas? • Airway resistance  Useful for differenciate central from obstructives apneas APAP devices combining PTG +FOT could apriopratelly respond • To snoring • To “flow limited” hypopneas • Only to obstructive apneas

  38. S9 Autoset™ (Resmed)FOT algorhytme Waiting time Exploring airway pattency FOT signal sent (4 Hz, 1 cm H2O)

  39. Closed airway Flow Mask pressure “Symetric” pattern

  40. Open airway Flow Mask pressure “Asymetric” pattern (cardiacoscillations)

  41. APAP: some main questions… • Whatis the better signal to detectevents? • Is the methodused to evaluatethis signal appropriate? • Are all APAP equally effective? • Is there an interest to reduce pressure levelovernight ?

  42. Principe : tester les machines sur banc de test boucle fermée

  43. APAP: the same concept but different algorhitmes Farré, AJRCCM 2002

  44. APAP testing in the clinical setting

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