Interpretation of sleep studies for patients with sleep-disordered breathing: What the anesthesiologist needs to know

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Abstract

There is increased interest in the perioperative management of patients with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). Anesthesiologists must distill information from clinical reports to make key decisions for optimizing perioperative care. A patient with SDB may present with a sleep study report at the time of surgery. Knowledge of the essential components of such a report can help the anesthesiologist evaluate the patient and optimize the perioperative management. In this narrative review, we describe how level I (i.e., laboratory-based) polysomnography (PSG) data are collected and scored using the recommended scoring guidelines, as well as the basic information and salient features of a typical PSG report relevant to the anesthesiologist. In addition, we briefly review the indications for sleep studies, including the types of laboratory-based studies, as well as the role and limitations of portable monitors (level II-IV studies) and examples of PSG reports in the clinical context.

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Meliana, V., Chung, F., Li, C. K., & Singh, M. (2018, January 1). Interpretation of sleep studies for patients with sleep-disordered breathing: What the anesthesiologist needs to know. Canadian Journal of Anesthesia. Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12630-017-0988-8

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