Abstract
Investigators have postulated thai pharyngeal collapse during sleep in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) may be alleviated by stimulating the genioglossus. The effect of electrical stimulation (ES) of the genioglossus on pharyngeal patency was examined in an isolated feline upper airway preparation and in apneic humans during sleep. We found that stimulation of the genioglossus (n = 8) and of the hypoglossal nerve (n = 1) increased maximum airflow through the isolated feline upper airway in humans during sleep. Additional findings in the isolated feline upper airway suggest that such increases in airflow were due to decreases in pharyngeal collapsibility. The evidence suggests that improvements in airflow dynamics with electrical stimulation are due to selective recruitment of the genioglossus, rather than due to nonspecific activation of the pharyngeal musculature or arousal from sleep. The implications of these results for future therapy with ES are discussed.
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Smith, P. L., Eisele, D. W., Podszus, T., Penzel, T., Grote, L., Peter, J. H., & Schwartz, A. R. (1996). Electrical stimulation of upper airway musculature. In Sleep (Vol. 19). https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/19.suppl_10.s284
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