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Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

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Page 1: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease

Philip Davies

April 2015

Page 4: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy

Page 5: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Progressive weakness of proximal muscles

• Falling / fatigue / motor delay / deterioration

• Muscle contractures / skeletal abnormalities

• Learning difficulties / behavioural problems

Page 6: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Respiratory Problems

• Restrictive lung defect

• Atelectasis

• Poor cough

• Bulbar problems

Page 7: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Sleep

• Loss of higher control• Reduced chemoreceptor feedback• Reduced cortical arousal • Reduced muscle tone

• Sleep cycles

• Fall in tidal volume• Elevation in CO2 and mild fall in O2 worse in REM

Page 8: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Obstruction

• Anatomical Blockage – Soft tissue – Bony obstruction

• Reduced airway tone– Poiseuille’s law

Central Hypoventilation

• Poor control of breathing

• Weakness– Central – Peripheral

Page 9: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Symptoms Sleep fragmentation

Tiredness / hyperactivityRestlessnessDay time sleepinessMorning headachesAnorexia

Page 10: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Mellies et al (2003)

PSG, Peak inspiratory pressures, inspiratory vital capacity, detailed questionnaire

35/49 had sleep disordered breathing 24/49 had nocturnal hypercarbia

Sleep disordered breathing associated with vital capacity <60%Nocturnal hypercarbia with vital capacity <40%

Peak inspiratory pressure correlated with above

Questionnaire not associated with sleep disordered breathing or nocturnal hypercarbia.

Page 11: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Philips 1999

Survival correlates with:• Daytime CO2• Vial Capacity• Night time saturations

Page 12: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Monitoring

• Spirometry – >60% FVC – low risk for SBD– <40% FVC high risk Wallgren-Petterson

2004

Longitudinal studies suggest FVC declines 2-39%/year median 8%

Page 13: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Sleep studies

• Oximetry• Oximetry plus capnography• “Respiratory studies”• Polysomnography

Page 14: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 15: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 16: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 17: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 18: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 19: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Night time only• “Normal” by day• Cheap• Variable tolerance• Facial shape

Mask / Non-invasive ventilation

Page 20: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Experienced team

• Good education for the child and family• Psychology support • Backup for when problems arise

• Start low and titrate• Mask fitting – not too tight

Starting NIV

Page 21: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Lots of Choice!

Page 22: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Interface is crucial

Page 23: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Complications

Leakage – sore eyes

Ventilator alarms

Gas distension of stomach

Face shape

Pressure sores – best treated early

Page 24: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Malocclusion

Mid-facial flattening

Pressure Sore

Page 25: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Non-invasive ventilation

• Annane 2007- Cochrane reviewEvidence was not clear cut in terms of symptoms, QOL, hospital admissions,

mortality or cost effectiveness but could reduce hypoventilation.

Evidence based on case studies, non-randomised studies and comparisons with historical data.

• Widely used ? Unethical not to offer this

Page 26: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Eagle et al Neuromusc Dis 2002

Trends in survival in DMD- secular trends

Page 27: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Vianello 1994

• 10 patients with DMD and daytime hypercarbia

• All were offered NIV but half refused

• After two years all on NIV were alive whilst 4/5 who refused had died of respiratory failure.

Page 28: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Simonds Thorax 1998

Page 29: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Mellies 2003

Page 30: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Mellies 2003

Page 31: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 32: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Reduce infections• 3 studies – 59 children

• Year before ventilation– 2-4 admissions– 40-50 days

• Year after ventilation– 1 admission– 10days admitted

• Less PICU

Page 33: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Ward Thorax 2005

When to start ventilation?

Page 34: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• Raphael 1994

70 patients with DMD with no daytime hypercarbia

FVC 20-50%

Prophylactic NIV started randomised basis

10 died in NIV group just 2 in control (p=0.05)

Page 35: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Mouthpiece Ventilation

Page 36: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Tracheostomy / Invasive Ventilation

• Day and night• More effective• Greater risk?• Voice• Care package • Delay discharge• Expensive

Page 37: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Invasive Ventilation

Page 38: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

DMD in Denmark

• DMD patients: 80 in 1977 170 in 2006 May double over next 20 years

• A review of 15 patients with DMD in Denmark found that 8 died of long standing cardiac disease, 2 had sudden deaths presumed cardiac. 2 died of complications with chest infections, 2 died following abdominal surgery and 1 had a peptic ulcer haemorrhage.

Page 40: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 41: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

• “The ordinary adult DMD patient states his quality of life as excellent; he is worried neither about his disease nor about the future. His assessment of income, hours of personal assistance, housing, years spent in school and ability to participate in desired activities are positive. Despite heavy immobilization, he is still capable of functioning in a variety of activities that are associated with normal life.”

Rahbek 2005

Page 42: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Palliative Care

• Changing role

• Process over a period of time

• Different conditions, different role

Page 43: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015
Page 44: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015

Summary

• Sleep disordered breathing common• Detection by screening• Ventilation in neuromuscular conditions

– Can prolong life– Improve physiology– Improve quality of life– Reduce infections (and help survive them)– Improve symptoms

Page 45: Sleep Disordered Breathing in Neuromuscular Disease Philip Davies April 2015