A patient who had undergone bilateral carotid body resection five years earlier for palliation of chronic airflow obstruction was found to have severe obstructive sleep apnea. He presented with hypercapnic respiratory failure, which improved after tracheostomy. A physiologic mechanism is proposed to explain this association. Previously reported studies of anesthetized animals suggest that loss of peripheral chemoreceptor activity could selectively decrease neural output to the genioglossus, the main protrusor muscle of the tongue, predisposing the upper airway to inspiratory occlusion.
CITATION STYLE
Parisi, R. A., Croce, S. A., Edelman, N. H., & Santiago, T. V. (1987). Obstructive sleep apnea following bilateral carotid body resection. Chest, 91(6), 922–924. https://doi.org/10.1378/chest.91.6.922
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