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Sleep-related breathing disorder in children with vagal nerve
stimulators.
Department of Respiratory Medicine,
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The
effects of vagal nerve stimulation on sleep-related breathing have not
been well-described in children. Vagal nerve stimulation was reported
to cause decreases in airflow during sleep, although most studies
reported this condition to be clinically insignificant. We present a
retrospective case series of nine children who underwent
polysomnography after vagal nerve-stimulator placement. All children,
except for one, had sleep-disordered breathing after stimulator
implantation. We describe in further detail a child who manifested
severe, obstructive sleep apnea postimplantation, with apneas occurring
regularly and consistently with stimulator activity, resulting in an
elevated apnea-hypopnea index of 37 per hour. Polysomnography was
repeated with the stimulator turned off, and revealed complete
resolution of the stimulator-related sleep apnea. With the vagal nerve
stimulator back on, continuous positive airway pressure treatment was
effective in normalizing the apnea-hypopnea index. This study
demonstrates that severe and clinically significant disturbances in
sleep-related breathing may occur with vagal nerve stimulators.
Obstructive apneas of this severity, related to vagal nerve
stimulators, were not previously described in pediatric patients. This
effect on sleep-related breathing warrants further investigation and
care in managing pediatric patients.
PMID: 18206790 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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