4.5 Article

ULTRASOUND SHEAR WAVE ELASTOGRAPHY OF THE TONGUE DURING SELECTIVE HYPOGLOSSAL NERVE STIMULATION IN PATIENTS WITH OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP APNEA SYNDROME

Journal

ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 10, Pages 2869-2879

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2021.06.009

Keywords

Obstructive sleep apnea; Hypoglossal nerve stimulation therapy; Sonography; Ultrasound; Shear wave elastography

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This study investigated the use of US-SWE to measure changes in tongue muscle stiffness during sHNS therapy in patients with OSAS, finding significant increases in SWV values on the side of stimulation during muscle contraction. The findings suggest that US-SWE is a reliable method for distinguishing and characterizing responders from non-responders in hypoglossal stimulation therapy, providing new possibilities for patient assessment and treatment.
Currently, there is no established technique to directly measure extrinsic tongue muscle activation during selective hypoglossal stimulation therapy (sHNS) in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) in a simple, non-invasive clinical setting. Ultrasound shear-wave elastography (US-SWE) enables quantitative measurement of tissue stiffness. We investigated whether US-SWE is able to detect changes in muscle stiffness of the tongue during sHNS. Patients with OSAS treated with sHNS were prospectively enrolled. A standardized US-SWE protocol was used to selectively measure tissue stiffness of the geniohyoid muscle (GH) and genioglossus (GG) muscles on the side of stimulator implantation (sGH, sGG) and on the contralateral side (nGH, nGG) without and with sHNS. Eighteen patients were included (median age = 62 years, interquartile range: 56-65, 83.3% male). Median shear-wave velocity (SWV) increased during contraction with each patient's clinically prescribed therapeutic regimen in the sGH (+19%, p = 0.020) and sGG (+81%, p < 0.001) and decreased during contraction in the nGH (-8%, p = 0.107) and nGG (-8%, p = 0.396). Differences in SWV during contraction were significant only on the side of stimulation (sGG +81%, sGH +19%). SWE measurements had excellent reliability as reflected by a Cronbach a value >= 0.9 for all target muscles pre- and post-contraction and an item-total correlation >= 0.5. US-SWE allows reliable measurement of SWV as an indicator of muscle stiffness of extrinsic tongue muscles. This non-invasive method provides new possibilities to distinguish and characterize responders from non-responders in hypoglossal stimulation therapy. Compared with the regular visual assessment of tongue movement, US-SWE of individual muscle groups provides a new non-invasive imaging tool in patients with OSAS. (C) 2021 World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. All rights reserved.

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