4.6 Article

Morphologic analyses of mandible and upper airway soft tissue by MRI of patients with obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome

Journal

SLEEP
Volume 29, Issue 7, Pages 909-915

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/29.7.909

Keywords

obstructive sleep apnoea; 3D MRI; Japanese; mandible; tongue volume; soft palate volume; lateral pharyngeal wall

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Study Objectives: To evaluate the morphological features of the mandible and the volume of the upper airway soft tissues in determining the anatomical risk factors for the upper airway in Japanese male patients with obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS). Methods: Five morphological parameters of the mandible at the mandibular base plane and three volumetric parameters of the upper airway soft tissue were analyzed using three-dimensional (3D) magnetic resonance imaging software in 31 OSAHS and 20 controls. Results: There were no significant differences between the two groups in mandibular internal width (the distance between the internal right and left gonia [IRG and ILG]) and mandibular bony thickness. However, the patients with OSAHS had a significantly wider mandibular divergence (the angle between the spina mentalis (SM)-IRG line and SM-ILG line), a smaller mandibular internal length (the perpendicular distance from SM to the RG-LG line), and a smaller area than the normal subjects at the mandibular base plane, There were no significant differences in these morphological parameters for the mandible between obese and nonobese OSAHS patients. The volumes of the tongue, soft palate, and lateral pharyngeal walls were not significantly different between the OSAHS and the control groups. Conclusions: Japanese male OSAHS patients had specific anatomical features in the bottom part of the mandible; however, obesity seemed to be a less significant risk factor. Investigators and clinicians must realize that ethnicity may modify the effects of obesity and abnormal craniofacial anatomy as risk factors for the pathogenesis of OSAHS.

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