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.
CITATION STYLE
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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