This study was designed to validate a new home portable respiratory recording device (PRRD) to identify sleep apnoea and hypopnoea in a group of subjects (n=116), from a sample of the general population. Full night polysomnography (PSG) was used as the gold standard and simultaneously performed with PRRD. PRRD measurements included oronasal airflow (thermistry), chest wall impedance, oxygen saturation, snoring and body position. The sensors were unique for each recording system. Data obtained was blindly reviewed and analysed. A high level of agreement between both methods apnoea/hypopnoea index by PSG and the respiratory disturbance index (RDI) by PRRD was observed. Accuracy of the PRRD was evaluated in terms of sensitivity and specificity for different RDI-PRRD cut-off points with respect to AHI-PSG >10 and AHI-PSG >30. A logistic regression model was performed to estimate the chance per unit of RDI of apnoeas. A received operating characteristic (ROC) curve was drawn to obtain the sensitivity/specificity profile for each observed RDI value obtained. From the ROC curve the authors identified the better cut-off points, which represent a balanced sensitivity/specificity. Through a classification table defined by the cut-off point, the post-odds to exhibit the disease was calculated. For a full PSG cut-off point of 10 a PRRD of six showed a balanced sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 92%. For a full PSG cut-off point of 30 a PRRD of 16 shows a balanced sensitivity/specificity (100% and 97%, respectively). Post odds of apnoea were calculated for each cut-off point. In conclusion, these data suggest that the portable respiratory recording device is an effective device to identify apnoeas and hypopnoeas in a general population and is therefore a suitable device to be used in epidemiological studies.
Urban circuits are an easy, inexpensive strategy, which demonstrated to be useful to stimulate physical activity in our population of severe and very severe COPD patients and resulted in increased exercise capacity even 9 months after completion of a rehabilitation program.
A 41-year-old man complained of subacute onset of dyspnea and pain in the neck and chest. He was diagnosed with bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis, based on clinical inspection of the breathing pattern and transdiaphragmatic pressure recording, and was trained to use a portable bi-level positive airway pressure apparatus (BiPAP). Needle electromyography showed profuse fibrillation potentials and positive waves in the diaphragm, more abundant on the right than left side, and no response to phrenic nerve stimulation. Other muscles were not involved. Follow-up examinations, performed at 9 and 12 months after onset of paralysis, demonstrated a slow but progressive improvement of the patient's respiratory function, together with the appearance of reinnervation potentials in the diaphragm, and polyphasic, long-latency responses to phrenic nerve stimulation. The subacute onset of the paralysis associated with local pain, and its subsequent recovery, suggest bilateral proximal lesions in the phrenic nerves. In the absence of traumatic or metabolic causes, these findings suggest that the phrenic nerve can be a target in idiopathic neuritis.
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