Respiratory indexes calculated using PAT-based portable devices positively correlated with those calculated from the scoring of PSG. Strengthened by the blinded design of most of the included studies, this technology represents a viable alternative to PSG for confirmation of clinically suspected sleep apnea.
Objectives: Comparisons between studies involving the tongue base are limited by the lack of a universal system for grading lingual tonsils. The authors propose a new standardized grading system for lingual tonsil hypertrophy (LTH). Validation was assessed via an interexaminer agreement study. Methods: Video assessment: The proposed grading system consists of a 0 to 4 scale with: 0 = complete absence of lymphoid tissue, 1 = lymphoid tissue scattered over tongue base, 2 = lymphoid tissue covering entirety of the tongue base with limited vertical thickness, 3 = lymphoid tissue 5 to 10 mm in thickness, 4 = lymphoid tissue >1 cm in thickness (above tip of the epiglottis). A teaching video was created to demonstrate identification of this grading system. After viewing the teaching video, 8 trained otolaryngologists graded 25 video clips of the tongue base, recorded during flexible laryngoscopy. Live assessment: A second study was performed by 2 examiners directly examining the tongue base of 23 patients using flexible laryngoscopy during a routine clinic visit. Each examiner viewed and recorded the grade of the lingual tonsils independently. Results: Video assessment: The overall Fleiss kappa statistic was found to be κ = 0.449 ( P < .0001). This value denotes moderate agreement. Live assessment: The overall kappa for nominal data were found to be κ = 0.8665 ( P < .0001). This value denotes perfect agreement. Conclusions: The moderate interexaminer correlation demonstrated during video-assessment, and perfect interexaminer correlation demonstrated during live assessment, indicate that this proposed grading system may be a valuable and useful tool in creating a common language to describe lingual tonsils.
Although combined nasal and sinus surgery may slightly improve AHI in a certain group of patients, it does not cure OSA or have a significant clinical impact.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.