We characterized apneas by a quantitative method (esophageal pressure measurements) and by a qualitative method (strain gauges) at the same time in 22 patients with sleep-related breathing disorders. Detection of respiratory effort by strain gauges significantly overestimated the total number of central apneas in each patient. Despite this overestimation, none of the patients was wrongly diagnosed as having pure central sleep apnea syndrome. Strain gauges are sufficiently reliable for the characterization of apneas in most patients. When strain gauges reveal that most apneas are central in origin, verification by esophageal pressure measurements is recommended.
Skin sympathetic vasomotor control can be examined in the extremities by the skin vasomotor test. In this test the change in skin blood flow and skin temperature in the hand and foot in response to a cold stimulus is utilized as an index of distal sympathetic nerve fibre integrity. This is of importance in conditions such as diabetes mellitus as peripheral autonomic neuropathy is associated with orthostatic hypotension and diabetic foot complications. The validity and reproducibility of the test as a marker of distal sympathetic nerve function has been studied. The test was performed in nine healthy control subjects and in nine subjects (undergoing minor surgery) after a sympathetic nerve conduction block (L2-L3) was achieved in the lower extremities by spinal analgesia. Changes in skin temperature (p < 0.001) and skin blood flow (p < 0.005) in responses to cooling were significantly larger in the control group than in the group with spinal analgesia. Repeated skin temperature measurements on 42 occasions (test-retest period of 4 weeks) in eight healthy and 34 diabetic subjects indicated a reliability coefficient of 80%. We conclude, therefore, that the skin vasomotor test provides a valid and reproducible quantitative assessment of skin sympathetic nerve function in upper and lower extremities.
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