Background: Myofunctional therapy has demonstrated efficacy in treating sleep-disordered breathing. We assessed the clinical use of a new mobile health (mHealth) app that uses a smartphone to teach patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) to perform oropharyngeal exercises. Objective: We conducted a pilot randomized trial to evaluate the effects of the app in patients with severe OSAHS. Methods: Forty patients with severe OSAHS (apnea–hypoxia index [AHI]>30) were enrolled prospectively and randomized into an intervention group that used the app for 90 sessions or a control group. Anthropometric measures, Epworth Sleepiness Scale (0-24), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (0-21), Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI) scores, and oxygen desaturation index were measured before and after the intervention. Results: After the intervention, 28 patients remained. No significant changes were observed in the control group; however, the intervention group showed significant improvements in most metrics. AHI decreased by 53.4% from 44.7 (range 33.8-55.6) to 20.88 (14.02-27.7) events/hour (P
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O’Connor-Reina, C., Ignacio Garcia, J. M., Ruiz, E. R., Del Carmen Morillo Dominguez, M., Barrios, V. I., Jardin, P. B., … Plaza, G. (2020). Myofunctional therapy app for severe apnea–hypopnea sleep obstructive syndrome: Pilot randomized controlled trial. JMIR MHealth and UHealth, 8(11). https://doi.org/10.2196/23123
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