4.6 Article

Regional associations between inspiratory tongue dilatory movement and genioglossus activity during wakefulness in people with obstructive sleep apnoea

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP285187

Keywords

intramuscular EMG; magnetic resonance imaging; respiratory physiology; sleep disordered breathing; upper airway

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This study investigated the relationship between inspiratory tongue dilatory movement and genioglossus muscle activity in individuals with and without obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). The results showed that tongue movement cannot be predicted by genioglossus electromyography (EMG), especially in OSA patients, suggesting the involvement of other airway dilator muscles in tongue movement.
Inspiratory tongue dilatory movement is believed to be mediated via changes in neural drive to genioglossus. However, this has not been studied during quiet breathing in humans. Therefore, this study investigated this relationship and its potential role in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). During awake supine quiet nasal breathing, inspiratory tongue dilatory movement, quantified with tagged magnetic resonance imaging, and inspiratory phasic genioglossus EMG normalised to maximum EMG were measured in nine controls [apnoea-hypopnea index (AHI) <= 5 events/h] and 37 people with untreated OSA (AHI >5 events/h). Measurements were obtained for 156 neuromuscular compartments (85%). Analysis was adjusted for nadir epiglottic pressure during inspiration. Only for 106 compartments (68%) was a larger anterior (dilatory) movement associated with a higher phasic EMG [mixed linear regression, beta = 0.089, 95% CI [0.000, 0.178], t(99) = 1.995, P = 0.049, hereafter EMG NE arrow/mvt NE arrow]. For the remaining 50 (32%) compartments, a larger dilatory movement was associated with a lower phasic EMG [mixed linear regression, beta = -0.123, 95% CI [-0.224, -0.022], t(43) = -2.458, P = 0.018, hereafter EMG SE arrow/mvt NE arrow]. OSA participants had a higher odds of having at least one decoupled EMG SE arrow/mvt NE arrow compartment (binary logistic regression, odds ratio [95% CI]: 7.53 [1.19, 47.47] (P = 0.032). Dilatory tongue movement was minimal (>1 mm) in nearly all participants with only EMG NE arrow/mvt NE arrow compartments (86%, 18/21). These results demonstrate that upper airway dilatory mechanics cannot be predicted from genioglossus EMG, particularly in people with OSA. Tongue movement associated with minimal genioglossus activity suggests co-activation of other airway dilator muscles.

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