Title :
Upper airway mechanics: The influence of gender
Author :
Malhotra, Atul ; Huang, Yaqi ; White, David P.
Author_Institution :
Brigham & Women´´s Hosp., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
Obstructive sleep apnea is an important disease characterized by repetitive pharyngeal collapse. This disease leads to substantial sleep fragmentation with associated hypoxemia and hypercapnia. Individuals with this disease have compromised pharyngeal anatomy, characterized by a positive critical closing pressure during sleep. During wakefulness, neuromuscular compensatory reflexes lead to increased pharyngeal dilator muscle activation. However, with the onset of sleep, these reflex mechanisms fail leading to pharyngeal collapse. For unclear reasons, this disease is substantially more common in men than in women. In order to characterize the mechanisms underlying this gender predisposition, we studied a total of 41 normal subjects. It was found that the major differences between the genders with regard to the upper airway appear to be anatomical. Gender-specific differences in pharyngeal airway length may explain much of the increased propensity for pharyngeal airway collapse observed in men. These findings may have relevance to the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.
Keywords :
biocontrol; diseases; gender issues; muscle; pneumodynamics; sleep; anatomical differences; compromised pharyngeal anatomy; disease; gender influence; gender predisposition; hypercapnia; hypoxemia; men; neuromuscular compensatory reflexes; normal subjects; obstructive sleep apnea; pathogenesis; pharyngeal airway length; pharyngeal collapse; pharyngeal dilator muscle activation; positive critical closing pressure; repetitive pharyngeal collapse; sleep fragmentation; upper airway; upper airway mechanics; wakefulness; women; Anatomy; Biomedical imaging; Cardiac disease; Cardiology; Cardiovascular diseases; Hospitals; Magnetic resonance imaging; Muscles; Physiology; Sleep apnea;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 2002. 24th Annual Conference and the Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society EMBS/BMES Conference, 2002. Proceedings of the Second Joint
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7612-9
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2002.1106528