Breathing related sleep disorders

  • Independent risk factor for high BP and diabetes and associated with heart attack, stroke, unexplained pulmonary hypertension
  • Most common
    • Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) — repeated episodes of throat blockage during sleep
    • Periodic breathing especially in heart failure
  • May also be non-breathing related sleep disorder — parasomnias (eg sleep walking, restless legs) insomnia (can’t get to or stay asleep), central sleep apnoea (problem with underlying drive to breathe)
  • There is no perfect screening tool for sleep related breathing disorders or OSA — one simple tool is STOP-BANG

Risk factors include

  • Obesity
  • Enlarged tonsils
  • Regressed chin
  • Alcohol use
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Chronic conditions especially high BP, heart failure

Ask

Person and someone who has watched them sleeping, eg partner

  • STOP — record one point if person
    • Snores
    • Is Tired during day
    • Has had Observed apnoea (to stop breathing)
    • Has high blood Pressure
  • Trouble sleeping
  • Abnormal movements or activities during sleep
  • Suddenly falling asleep at inappropriate times
  • Alcohol use

Check

  • Calculate age-appropriate REWS
    • Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
    • Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
  • Weight, BGL
  • U/A 
  • ECG
  • Head-to-toe exam — with attention to
    • Masses or blockages — nose, mouth, back of throat, tonsils, tongue
    • Heart exam
    • lung exam
  • BANG — record one point if person has
    • B ody Mass Index — more than 35
    • A ge —  over 50 years
    • N eck size — circumference more than 40cm
    • G ender — male

Do

  • FBC, TFT, urine ACR
  • Calculate STOP-BANG score from Ask and Check
    • If STOP-BANG score 3 or more AND able to manage treatment — refer for sleep/respiratory service follow up
    • If STOP-BANG score 3 or more AND not able to manage treatment — provide advice on weight and alcohol management
    • If STOP-BANG score less than 3 — provide advice on weight and alcohol management and consider other diagnoses. If non-breathing related sleep disorder suspected — talk with sleep/respiratory service
  • Assess if willing or able to undertake treatment if needed
    • For OSA/periodic breathing — often use nasal CPAP with mask worn over face when sleeping. May use upper airway splints, surgery
    • Talk about cost of buying device, ongoing treatment costs, power supply and power bill, housing, mobility, person's lifestyle, eg alcohol use

Referral and management

  • Respiratory nurse consult to plan and coordinate referral 
  • Medical consult for referral to sleep specialist
    • Sleep specialist will usually do sleep study at home (urban resident) or in hostel (remote resident)
    • If sleep study abnormal and person willing/able — trial CPAP 1–2 months. If trial successful — long-term treatment
    • May suggest other treatments — splints, surgery, lifestyle changes

Follow-up

  • If doesn't get better — talk with sleep/respiratory service

If using CPAP

Most CPAP machines can be monitored remotely via cellular modem — the trial provider or the Respiratory Clinical Nurse Consultant can be contacted for efficacy data reports

  • Review at clinic — every 2 weeks during trial THEN every 3 months
    • Remind person to always bring CPAP machine and mask with them
  • Check
    • How many hours a day and days a week machine is used
    • Check that the air intake filter is clean
    • Is OSA being controlled — machine records this. Look for apnoea hypopnea index (AHI)
    • Can person set up equipment and fit own mask
    • Is machine generating airflow
  • Check face mask for
    • Damage to seal against skin
    • Blockage to expiratory vent opening — usually at joint between face mask and tube going to machine
    • Major leaks — feel for escape of air with mask fitted and machine on
    • Check skin under face mask for irritation or damage
  • If problems with equipment or management — respiratory nurse consult
  • Specialist follow-up — at least once a year OR as per management plan
    • If person has equipment — must take machine and mask to appointment