Increase OSA prevalence in Asthma (2-6x more common in asthma)
Less common by HST but likely because you can't actually measure sleep apnea in HST
HST underestimates OSA prevalence
Prospective data that suggests that asthma was a risk factor for incidence of OSA (39%) 4 years later
Relationship with duration of asthma and development of OSA
having asthma for >10 years was a/w highest risk for OSA development
Therefore asthma in in of it self can develop OSA
each 5 year increment of ...
Using ICS in a dose dependent fashion was a/w high OSA risk
5 fold increase risk
How?
? ICS may lead to genioglossus dysfunction
? ICS may lead to fat deposition to the posterior oropharynx
After 4months. increase protrusive strength of the tongue but cannot sustain this (decrease sustain)
similar to untreated OSA patients
increase in upper airway collapsibility during sleep
increase fat accumulaton in the neck by 21% (measured by MRI)
no weight gain in these subjects
ICS effects
structural changesin the tongye (muscle fiber shifts, laminin) and neck (fat) whcih alter the uniform contraction and balanced co-activation of key muscle groups
Tongue function and muscle fiber shifts - osa patients
Clinical implicaitons
predispositon to collapse during sleep and potnetial delteriouss effects on other uaw functions
OSA shifts asthma phenotype to more non-eosinophilic
Apneas resulting in intrathoraicc pressure swings → mechnical stress on the lower airways
Summary Asthma / OSA
OSA-2.6x more common in asthma:
HSS underestimate OSA prevalence
IS use may contribute, apart from other disease-related features
OSA influences asthma control:
Similar relationships with day- and night-time asthma control
CPAP for OSA improves asthma control indices and QoL, but not FEV, (?remodeling)
Underlying mechanisms relate to OSA's features:
CIH:
shifts the inflammation towards less eosinophilic, Th-1 pathways associated with tissue remodeling led to airways obstruction, which may be irreversible
Mechanical stress and sleep fragmentation may also contribute
OSA prevalence in IPF is high and often unrecognized
Symptoms and questionnaires have poor predictive ability in IPF
Potential improved survival in IPF with adherent CPAP treatment for OSA
OSA is highly common in IPF and largely unrecognized symptoms are not predictive of the diagnosis, thus, formal sleep evaluation should be considered
OSA relates with worse IPF outcomes and survival:
in part, through a contribution to the RV dysfunction
OSA features (hypoxia, pressure swings) could affect various lung compartments (parenchyma, capillary bed), such that the combined effect is worse pulmonary & RV dysfunction, and gas exchange
Data are limited and larger/mechanistic studies are needed
Addressing OSA early offers a glimpse of hope in a disease with a grim prognosis