Sleep Apnea Syndromes: Mondini S

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Sleep Apnea Syndromes," originating from Planet Earth —» Mondini S.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Guideline [Guidelines for the diagnosis of childhood obstructive sleep apnea syndrome] free! 2004

Villa MP, Brunetti L, Bruni O, Cirignotta F, Cozza P, Donzelli G, Ferini Strambi L, Levrini L, Mondini S, Nespoli L, Nosetti L, Pagani J, Zucconi M, Anonymous00069. · Gruppo di Studio interdisciplinare disturbi respiratori nel sonno, Società Italiana di Pediatria, Rome, Italy. · Minerva Pediatr. · Pubmed #15252374 links to  free full text

This publication has no abstract.

2 Clinical Conference Upper airway dynamics during negative expiratory pressure in apneic and non-apneic awake snorers. free! 2006

Ferretti A, Giampiccolo P, Redolfi S, Mondini S, Cirignotta F, Cavalli A, Tantucci C. · Division of Pneumology, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy. · Respir Res. · Pubmed #16573817 links to  free full text

Abstract: BACKGROUND: The ability of negative expiratory pressure (NEP) technique to differentiate between awake snorers with and without obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea (OSAH) was investigated. METHODS: Forty-eight subjects with sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and 7 healthy subjects, as non-snorer controls, underwent the NEP application of -5 and -7 cmH2O in the seated and supine position during wakefulness, after performing a sleep study. The upper airway collapsibility was assessed by computing the volume exhaled during the first 0.5 sec. (V,NEP0.5) and 1 sec. (V,NEP1) following the NEP start. RESULTS: Patients with severe (AHI > or = 30) (n = 19) and mild-to-moderate (AHI <30 and >5) (n = 15) OSAH had lower V,NEP0.5 (340 +/- 88 ml) as compared to snorers (AHI < or = 5) (n = 14) (427 +/- 101 ml; p < 0.01) and controls (n = 7) (492 +/- 69 ml; p < 0.001) in the supine position with NEP -5 cmH2O. Less significant differences among the different groups were observed for V,NEP0.5 in the seated position with NEP -5 cmH2O and in both positions with NEP -7 cmH2O (only OSAH patients vs controls, p < 0.001). Similar results were obtained for V,NEP1 in either position by using both NEP -5 cmH2O and -7 cmH2O. In spite of this, a substantial overlapping of V,NEP0.5 and V,NEP1 between snorers and OSAH patients did not allow to identify a reliable diagnostic cut-off level. An inverse correlation with AHI was found for V,NEP0.5 in the supine position with NEP -5 cmH2O (rs = -0.46, p < 0.05) in severe OSAH patients. CONCLUSION: The awake OSAH patients exhibit values of V,NEP0.5 and V,NEP1 lesser than those of awake snorers. The NEP technique, however, appears to have a limited usefulness as clinical tool for routine screening of the OSAH patients during wakefulness.

3 Clinical Conference Unreliability of automatic scoring of MESAM 4 in assessing patients with complicated obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. free! 2001

Cirignotta F, Mondini S, Gerardi R, Mostacci B, Sancisi E. · Sleep Medicine Unit, Unit of Neurology, S.Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy. · Chest. · Pubmed #11348943 links to  free full text

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Portable devices are used for unattended recording of patients with suspected obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). The MESAM 4 (MAP; Martinsried, Germany) is a computerized ambulatory polysomnographic system that records four parameters: breathing noise, heart rate, arterial oxygen saturation (SaO(2)), and body position. Design and method: We evaluated the reliability of the oxygen desaturation index (ODI) automatically calculated by the MESAM 4 device in evaluating patients with "complicated" OSAS. These patients present SaO(2) drops due to apneas associated with a fall in baseline SaO(2) during sleep, as occurs in the "overlap syndrome." Ten patients with complicated OSAS underwent nocturnal MESAM 4 recordings, and we compared the visual and automatic scorings of the ODI. RESULTS: The ODI obtained with visual scoring was significantly higher than ODI automatically calculated by the MESAM 4 in all patients. In some patients, this difference was so significant that it could bias clinical judgment of OSAS severity. We demonstrated that the system did not identify those desaturation events that were superimposed on a fall in baseline SaO(2). The error depends on the algorithm by which the device recognizes the desaturation events and calculates the baseline SaO(2). CONCLUSION: Automatic analysis of MESAM 4 recordings may be misleading in evaluating OSAS patients who have a fall in baseline SaO(2) during sleep. In this case, visual scoring performed by a trained polysomnographer is recommended.

4 Article Daytime sleepiness and driving performance in patients with obstructive sleep apnea: comparison of the MSLT, the MWT, and a simulated driving task. 2009

Pizza F, Contardi S, Mondini S, Trentin L, Cirignotta F. · Unit of Neurology, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy. · Sleep. · Pubmed #19294958 No free full text.

Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVES: To test the reliability of a driving-simulation test for the objective measurement of daytime alertness compared with the Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT) and with the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (MWT), and to test the ability to drive safely, in comparison with on-road history, in the clinical setting of untreated severe obstructive sleep apnea. DESIGN: N/A. SETTING: Sleep laboratory. PATIENTS OR PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-four patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea and reported daytime sleepiness varying in severity (as measured by the Epworth Sleepiness Scale). INTERVENTIONS: N/A. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Patients underwent MSLT and MWT coupled with 4 sessions of driving-simulation test on 2 different days randomly distributed 1 week apart. Simulated-driving performance (in terms of lane-position variability and crash occurrence) was correlated with sleep latency on the MSLT and more significantly on the MWT, showing a predictive validity toward the detection of sleepy versus alert patients with obstructive sleep apnea. In addition, patients reporting excessive daytime sleepiness or a history of car crashes showed poorer performances on the driving simulator. CONCLUSIONS: A simulated driving test is a suitable tool for objective measurement of daytime alertness in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. Further studies are needed to clarify the association between simulated-driving performance and on-road crash risk of patients with sleep disordered breathing.

5 Article Daytime driving simulation performance and sleepiness in obstructive sleep apnoea patients. 2008

Pizza F, Contardi S, Ferlisi M, Mondini S, Cirignotta F. · Unit of Neurology, S.Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of Bologna, 40138 Bologna, Italy. · Accid Anal Prev. · Pubmed #18329412 No free full text.

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Sleepiness related car accidents are common in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS) patients. The objective measurements of sleepiness used in clinical setting quantify the tendency to fall asleep in quiet situations that are completely different from driving. METHODS: We studied 30 OSAS patients with subjective (subjective sleepiness scales) and objective (multiple sleep latency test, MSLT) sleepiness measurements, associated with driving simulation test (DST), previously validated in young healthy subjects. The results of subjective and objective sleepiness tests were compared with simulated driving performance in order to evaluate the suitability of our DST for measuring alertness. RESULTS: Subjective and objective sleepiness measurements were significantly correlated with driving performance on the simulator. The most significant correlates of sleepiness were the measures of the primary vehicle control task on the simulator: lane position variability and crash data. The comparison of DST and MSLT results suggested our driving simulated approach could be used to evaluate daytime sleepiness in the clinical setting of OSAS patients. CONCLUSIONS: Our DST is a suitable objective tool to detect sleepiness in OSAS patients, and could be useful in the clinical setting of sleep medicine and research.

6 Article One-phase management of severe obstructive sleep apnea: tongue base reduction with hyoepiglottoplasty plus uvulopalatopharyngoplasty. 2006

Sorrenti G, Piccin O, Mondini S, Ceroni AR. · ENT Department, S Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna University, Bologna, Italy. · Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. · Pubmed #17141082 No free full text.

Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To describe the results of a 1 phase surgical procedure for the treatment of severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) attributable to tongue base obstruction. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A retrospective nonrandomized study at S Orsola Malpighi University Hospital of Bologna, Italy. METHODS: Ten male patients affected by severe OSA (mean apnea/hypopnea index [AHI] of 54.7), underwent uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) associated with tongue base reduction and hyoepiglottoplasty (TBRHE). The indications to this surgical procedure were based on the presence of hyolingual abnormalities and absence of craniofacial deficiencies determined by preoperative assessment. RESULTS: Mean AHI decreased from 54.7+/-11.5 to 9.4+/-5.4 whereas the mean low SaO2 value went from 77%+/-6.2 to 90.7%+/-3 and the time of sleep with SaO2<90% improved from 53%+/-17.2 to 7.3%+/-8. The overall success rate was 100%. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: TBRHE is an effective and safe treatment in patients with severe OSA attributable to tongue base obstruction and in absence of craniofacial deficiencies.

7 Article Tongue base reduction with hyoepiglottoplasty for the treatment of severe OSA. 2004

Sorrenti G, Piccin O, Scaramuzzino G, Mondini S, Cirignotta F, Ceroni AR. · Department of Surgical Science and Reanimation, "S Orsola-Malpighi" Hospital, Italy. · Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital. · Pubmed #15688905 No free full text.

Abstract: Surgical treatment for retro-lingual obstruction in patients suffering from obstructive sleep apnea syndrome remains a problem for which there is no simple solution. The techniques most in use (tongue suspension, genioglossal advancement with hyoid suspension) are effective primarily as stabilization methods modifying neither tongue position, nor volume and only produce appreciable results when performed on non-overweight patients with respiratory disturbance index <40. For patients suffering from severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome in whom the most obvious morphological alteration is the presence of hypo-pharyngeal obstruction due to tongue base hypertrophy, who are overweight or suffering from moderate obesity, a surgical procedure aimed at reducing tongue volume and at repositioning the hyoid bone, even if invasive, leads to a favourable outcome. Herein, personal experience is described in a group of 8 patients presenting severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome incompatible with normal quality of life and normal life expectancy (mean respiratory disturbance index = 55.1) who underwent surgical resection of the tongue base with hyoepiglottoplasty. This technique, first described by Chabolle, differs radically from others inasmuch as it guarantees enlargement of the hypo-pharyngeal lumen and remodelling of the hyolingual complex. Using a suprahyoid cervical approach, it is possible to effect ample reduction of the tongue base with amplification of the hypo-pharyngeal airway without inducing problems as far as concerns either swallowing or speech.

8 Article Tongue base suspension technique in obstructive sleep apnea: personal experience. 2003

Sorrenti G, Piccin O, Latini G, Scaramuzzino G, Mondini S, Rinaldi Ceroni A. · Department of Surgical Science and Reanimation, Otorhinolaryngology Unit, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of Bologna, Italy. · Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital. · Pubmed #15046416 No free full text.

Abstract: Tongue suspension with Kit Repose is a surgical mini-invasive end-oral technique used in treatment of rear tongue obstruction. The base of the tongue is anchored with a non-reabsorbable suture, held in place with a titanium screw, to the mandible in correspondence to the geni apophysis of the mandible: this loop should prevent the tongue, during sleep, from dropping backwards, favoured also by gravity and hypotonicity of the genioglossus muscle. Aim of this report is to focus on the results of our experience in 15 patients presenting obstructive sleep apnea submitted to uvulopalatopharyngoplasty associated with tongue suspension, using the Kit Response bone screw system (Influent Inc., San Francisco, CA, USA). Mean age of patients was 50.5 years (range 36-66), with mean RDI (apnoea/hypopnea index) of 44.47 (range 23-63) and mean body mass index of 28.27 (range 22.6-34.4). Scrupulous clinical evaluation, including endoscopy and cephalometry, revealed a pharyngeal obstruction both retro palatal and retro lingual. Clinical and polysonnographic examinations were carried out 4-6 months after surgery. Patients were considered responders if the RDI had decreased by 50% and below 20, with disappearance of subjective symptoms (snoring, daytime sleepiness). Polysonnographic examination showed, overall, good results with mean reduction of RDI from 44.5 to 24.2 (45% reduction); albeit, only 6 cases could be considered surgically successful; 4 cases (26.6%) showed improvement whereas the remaining 5 (33.4%) failed to present any significant change in RDI. Even if the technique was, indeed, mini-invasive, rapidly performed and lacked significant complications, the results were not, in our opinion, encouraging, bearing in mind the high cost of the kit and limited stability of the results over time. Better results can be obtained by advancement of the genioglossus associated with hyoid suspension, whereas, of the mini-invasive techniques, promising outcomes would appear feasible with reduction of volume at the base of the tongue, using radiofrequency.

9 Article Anterior spinal artery syndrome complicated by the ondine curse. free! 2003

Manconi M, Mondini S, Fabiani A, Rossi P, Ambrosetto P, Cirignotta F. · Units of Neurology, St Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy. · Arch Neurol. · Pubmed #14676058 links to  free full text

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Anterior spinal artery (ASA) syndrome results in motor palsy and dissociated sensory loss below the level of the lesion, accompanied by bladder dysfunction. When the cervical spine is involved, breathing disorders may be observed. OBJECTIVE: To describe the polysomnographic findings in a patient with cervical ASA syndrome complicated by a sleep breathing disorder. SETTING: Unit of neurology at a sleep center.Patient A 30-year-old man had an ischemic lesion that affected the anterior cervical spinal cord (C2-C6) bilaterally because of an ASA thrombosis. He developed ASA syndrome associated with respiratory impairment during sleep. RESULTS: The polysomnographic study during sleep showed a severe sleep disruption caused by continuous central apneas that appeared immediately after falling asleep. Treatment by intermittent positive pressure ventilation normalized the respiratory pattern and sleep architecture. CONCLUSIONS: The sleep breathing pattern was compatible with central alveolar hypoventilation due to automatic breathing control failure caused by a lesion of the reticulospinal pathway, which normally activates ventilatory muscles during sleep. This autonomic sleep breathing impairment resembles that found as a complication in patients who undergo spinothalamic tract cervical cordotomy for intractable pain. This surgical complication is known as the Ondine curse.