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Central Sleep Apnea in Adults: Causes and Treatment

Central Sleep Apnea in Adults: Causes and Treatment. Timothy Daum MD Spectrum Health Grand Rapids. Rogers, R. Chest 2008;133:598. The majority of sleep apnea we see is obstructive in nature:. Central Sleep Apnea. At most 10% of sleep study population Pathogenesis

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Central Sleep Apnea in Adults: Causes and Treatment

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  1. Central Sleep Apnea in Adults: Causes and Treatment Timothy Daum MD Spectrum Health Grand Rapids

  2. Rogers, R. Chest 2008;133:598

  3. The majority of sleep apnea we see is obstructive in nature:

  4. Central Sleep Apnea • At most 10% of sleep study population • Pathogenesis • Distinguishing characteristics • Approach to management

  5. Central Sleep Apnea • Sleep transition central apnea • Congenital Alveolar Hypoventilation • Ondine’s Curse • CHF • Cheyne-Stokes Periodic Breathing • Stroke or Other Neurologic Insult • High Altitude Periodic Breathing • Narcotics • Treatment Emergent Central Apnea • Complex Sleep Disordered Breathing

  6. CSA: Symptoms • Disrupted, unrefreshing sleep • Many complain of insomnia • Excessive daytime sleepiness

  7. Sleep Transition Central Apnea • Common with recurrent arousals • OSA, PLMS • CO2 will climb from 40 to 45 in normal sleep • Robust ventilatory response with arousal • CO2 driven below ventilatory threshold • Apnea with sleep onset

  8. Sleep Transition Central Apnea

  9. Sleep Transition Related Central Apnea

  10. Congenital Alveolar Hypoventilation • Ondine’s curse • Due to recently recognized genetic abnormality • Affected individuals have higher CO2 set point • Usually identified in infants • Milder cases found in adults • Responds well to timed Bilevel Pressure

  11. CSA and CHF • Up to 40% of those with reduced LVEF • Most common with: • More advanced age • Male • Atrial fibrillation • Presence of CSA portends a worse prognosis

  12. SDB in CHF Patients New York Heart Association Level I Level II Level III Level IV OSA Mixed Apneas CSA

  13. CSA and CHF:Cheyne-Stokes Periodic Breathing • Note period length of 60-90 sec • Note circulation time. Usually over 30 seconds in CHF.

  14. CHF and CSA: Pathogenesis • Dyspnea leads to hyperventilation and hypocapnea while awake • With sleep onset, hypocapnea leads to apnea and hypoventilation • With increased circulation time, hypercapnea becomes significant before blood gets from lungs to brain stem leading to marked hyperventilation • Hyperventilation leads to hypocapnea • Repeat

  15. CHF and CSA: Treatment • Main therapy is optimize medical management of CHF • Positive airway pressure shown to: • Improve exercise tolerance • Improve LVEF • Decrease catecholamines • Quality of Life • No proven benefit on mortality

  16. CHF and CSA: Alternative Treatments • Oxygen • May decrease dyspnea and hyperventilation • Theophylline • Respiratory stimulant • Adaptive Servo Ventilation

  17. CSA and CVA • Present in 26% of acute stroke patients • Continues in 7% long term • Remember the high incidence of OSA in stroke patients as well • Unclear if this precedes CVA

  18. CSA and Narcotics • Can be seen in up to 50% of chronic narcotic users. • Prevalence almost certainly increasing.

  19. Treatment Emergent Central Apnea • Titration of CPAP beyond that needed to resolve obstructive events can lead to the development of central events with arousals. • Important to differentiate from complex sleep apnea • Central events seen before obstructive events controlled

  20. Complex Sleep Disordered Breathing • Traditional classification is obstructive vs central sleep apnea • Recently recognized group of patients who start out looking like mostly OSA but develop prominent CSA with CPAP • Central apneas develop before obstructive events controlled

  21. Complex SDB: Baseline

  22. What Do We Know About CompSA? • Prevalence: Estimated to be 15% of SDB population • About 50% don’t ever respond to CPAP • Residual symptoms (fatigue, sleepiness, depression) • Intolerance to therapy • Dramatic improvement during REM sleep (reverse of pattern seen in OSA) • No distinguishing clinical profile Morgenthaler et al, Sleep, 2006

  23. CSA: Treatment

  24. CSA: Treatment • Maximize medical therapy of underlying condition • Diuretics; afterload reduction; beta-blockers, biventricular pacers for CHF • Minimize narcotics and other sedatives • Trial CPAP • Often unresponsive

  25. Adaptive Servo Ventilation • Servo: Any type of self-regulating feedback system or mechanism • VPAP Adapt SV • ResMed • BiPAP auto SV • Respironics

  26. PAP Therapy

  27. How Does it Work? • Creates a Target Ventilation • The ASV algorithm monitors recent average minute ventilation (~3 min window) • It continuously calculates a target ventilation throughout the night (90% of recent average ventilation) • Ventilates to the Target • Algorithm monitors patient ventilation and compares it to the target ventilation • Adjusts pressure support up or down as needed to achieve target

  28. End Expiratory Pressure (EEP) • EEP = EPAP • Default EEP = 5 cm H20 • May adjust in 1-2 cm increments to resolve any upper airway obstruction (for CHF patients wait 40 minutes before adjusting) EEP: manually titrate like CPAP to hold airway patent Pressure (cm H20) Time

  29. maxPS Pressure (cm H20) minPS Time Pressure Support (PS) • Pressure support = IPAP - EPAP • Pressure support varies between limits • minPS (default 3 cm H2O) • maxPS (default 10 cm H2O) • Values are adjustable but defaults work in almost all cases

  30. Normal breathing effort Central apnea (no spontaneous effort) Pressure (cm H20) Time Gives Support Only When Needed The ASV algorithm automatically adjusts the magnitude of pressure support breath by breath to: • Provide minimal, comfortable support during the over-breathing phase (hyperpnea) or during normal breathing • Increase support during under-breathing(hypopnea or apnea)

  31. Support When Needed Effort Flow FG SpO2

  32. Normalized Breathing: 10 Minutes Into Session Effort Flow FG SpO2

  33. Greatest Reduction in Central Apnea Index • 83% further reduction in CAI compared to CPAP • 50% reduction compared to bilevel Teschler et al, AJRCCM, 2001

  34. Normalizes Total Arousal Index • Partial improvement with oxygen and CPAP • Normalization with bilevel and ACS Teschler et al, AJRCCM, 2001

  35. Significant Increase in Deep Sleep • SWS+REM = % time spent in deep, restorative sleep • Large increases in SWS+REM with ASV and bilevel but not with either O2 or CPAP Teschler et al, AJRCCM, 2001

  36. CMS Guidelines for CSA(E0471)

  37. Conclusion • By now, you should be able to: • List the ideal types of patients for VPAP Adapt SV • Describe how the VPAP Adapt SV treats patients • Discuss the results of studies using ResMed’s Adaptive Servo-Ventilation algorithm • List the keys to successful treatment • State the qualifying criteria and reimbursement guidelines for the VPAP Adapt SV

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