Publication | Closed Access
Polysomnographic effect of nasal surgery on positional and non-positional obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea patients
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Citations
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References
2013
Year
After surgery, although nasal resistance decreased significantly in all patients, the total rate of success and response in treating OSAHS was only 22.7%. Grouped on the basis of the severity level of AHI, the lowest SpO2 increased and AHI, supine AHI, and arousal indexes decreased significantly only in mild OSAHS (p < 0.05). Subdivided according to the presence or absence of positional dependency, the lowest SpO2 increased and supine AHI decreased significantly in both PPs and NPPs with mild OSAHS and in PPs with moderate OSAHS (p < 0.05). AHI significantly increased in PPs with severe OSAHS (p < 0.05). Supine sleep time was relatively prolonged significantly in PPs with moderate and severe OSAHS (p < 0.05).
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