Upper Airway Sleep-Disordered Breathing in Women
- Christian Guilleminault, MD;
- Riccardo Stoohs, MD;
- Young-do Kim, MD;
- Ronald Chervin, MD;
- Jed Black, MD; and
- Alex Clerk, MD
- From the Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic and Research Center, Palo Alto, California. Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama, Japan. The Sleep Disorders Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Requests for Reprints: Christian Guilleminault, MD, Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic and Research Center, 701 Welch Road, Suite 2226, Palo Alto, CA 94304. Acknowledgment: The authors thank Michael Gulevich for editing the manuscript. Grant Support: In part by grant AG 07772 from the National Institute of Aging and by GCRC grant MO1 RR 00070 from the National Institutes of Health.
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the various clinical presentations of sleep-disordered breathing in women.
Design: A retrospective case–control study.
Setting: A sleep disorders clinic.
Patients: 334 women, aged 18 years and older, seen between 1988 and 1993, who were diagnosed with upper airway sleep-disordered breathing. Controls were 60 women with insomnia and 100 men with sleep-disordered breathing.
Measurements: Clinical, anatomic, and polygraphic information.
Results: The mean lag time (±SD) in women between the appearance of symptoms and a positive diagnosis was 9.7 ±3.1 years; among participants 30 to 60 years of age, the duration of untreated symptoms differed (P <0.001) between women and men. Sleep-disordered breathing was blamed for divorce or social isolation by 40% of the case patients. Abnormal maxillomandibular features were noted in 45% of the women with disordered breathing. Dysmenorrhea and amenorrhea (which disappeared after treatment with nasal continuous positive airway pressure) were reported in 43% of premenopausal women compared with 13% of persons in the control group of women with insomnia. Thirty-eight women (11.4%) with upper airway sleep-disordered breathing had a respiratory disturbance index of less than 5 and were significantly younger, had a smaller neck circumference, and had a lower body mass index than women with a respiratory disturbance index of 5 or more.
Conclusion: Physicians should revise their understanding of upper airway sleep-disordered breathing so that they notice women with certain craniofacial features, a low body mass index, a small neck circumference, and a respiratory disturbance index of less than 5. These revisions may enable more rapid diagnosis and treatment of women with sleep-disordered breathing.
- Copyright ©2004 by the American College of Physicians
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