Sleep related upper airway obstruction and hypoxaemia in sickle cell disease

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Abstract

A cohort of 53 patients (age range 1.9-16.5 years) with sickle cell disease (49 homozygous SS and four Sβ°-thalassaemia) was studied for evidence of sleep related upper airway obstruction (UAO). This involved (i) a clinical assessment based on a history of snoring, a score of tonsillar size, and (for 50 patients) overnight multichannel respiratory recordings, and (ii) a blinded analysis of arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) from the above recordings, and comparison with results from 50 healthy age matched controls of both white (n = 25) and Afro-Caribbean race. There was no difference in the baseline SaO2 values of the white and Afro-Caribbean controls. Eighteen patients with sickle cell disease (36%) were found to have sleep related UAO. The blinded analysis showed that eight patients (16%) had episodic hypoxaemia (SaO2 ≤80%, a value not observed in controls) and/or low baseline SaO2 values (<95.8%, the lowest value seen in the controls). Postoperative assessment was undertaken in 15 patients who underwent adenotonsillectomy. All demonstrated an improvement in symptoms and a reduction or abolition of episodic hypoxaemia. Of the 47 patients assessed when free of UAO (not demonstrated on screening, n = 32, or resolved following surgery, n = 15), seven continued to show baseline hypoxaemia. Sleep related UAO and baseline hypoxaemia are common complications of sickle cell disease in children.

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APA

Samuels, M. P., Stebbens, V. A., Davies, S. C., Picton-Jones, E., & Southall, D. P. (1992). Sleep related upper airway obstruction and hypoxaemia in sickle cell disease. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 67(7), 925–929. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.67.7.925

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