2023
DOI: 10.5664/jcsm.10232
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Short-term positive effects of a mandibular advancement device in a selected phenotype of patients with moderate obstructive sleep apnea: a prospective study

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Most current research of oral appliances implicated that MADs in general have a lower effect on AHI reduction, but higher adherence compared to CPAP (Schwartz et al, 2018). (Buyse et al, 2023). Within these results, craniofacial components seem to be crucial to determine MAD responses.…”
Section: Mandibular Advancement Devices (Mads)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Most current research of oral appliances implicated that MADs in general have a lower effect on AHI reduction, but higher adherence compared to CPAP (Schwartz et al, 2018). (Buyse et al, 2023). Within these results, craniofacial components seem to be crucial to determine MAD responses.…”
Section: Mandibular Advancement Devices (Mads)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eight phenotypic features, including younger age, female, lower BMI, smaller neck circumference, maxillary and mandibular retraction (e.g., a shorter maxillary length, lower anterior and posterior facial height, a shorter distance from the hyoid bone to the third cervical vertebra), a narrower airway (e.g., shorter airway length and a smaller minimum airway cross‐sectional area), a shorter soft palate, lower AHI, higher nadir oxygen saturation, and lower therapeutic CPAP pressure were found to be correlated with successful MADs treatment. Particularly for non‐obese patients with OSA, phenotype‐guided MAD therapy increased short‐term treatment success (Buyse et al, 2023). Within these results, craniofacial components seem to be crucial to determine MAD responses.…”
Section: Heart Rate Variability In Osa Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%