Article Open Access June 07, 2021

Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?

1
Jessenius Faculty of Medicine in Martin, Comenius University in Bratislava, Martin, Slovakia
2
Clinic of Pneumology and Phthisiology, University Hospital Martin and Jessenius Faculty of Medicine CU, Martin, Slovakia
Page(s): 1-9
Received
May 01, 2021
Revised
June 02, 2021
Accepted
June 06, 2021
Published
June 07, 2021
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Scientific Publications
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APA Style
Gavliakova, S. , Gavliakova, S. Bellova, V. , Bellova, V. Vitazkova, D. , & Vitazkova, D. (2021). Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?. Current Research in Public Health, 1(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
ACS Style
Gavliakova, S. ; Gavliakova, S. Bellova, V. ; Bellova, V. Vitazkova, D. ; Vitazkova, D. Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?. Current Research in Public Health 2021 1(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
Chicago/Turabian Style
Gavliakova, Silvia, Silvia Gavliakova. Vladimira Bellova, Vladimira Bellova. Diana Vitazkova, and Diana Vitazkova. 2021. "Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?". Current Research in Public Health 1, no. 1: 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
AMA Style
Gavliakova S, Gavliakova SBellova V, Bellova VVitazkova D, Vitazkova D. Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?. Current Research in Public Health. 2021; 1(1):1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
@Article{crph26,
AUTHOR = {Gavliakova, Silvia and Bellova, Vladimira and Vitazkova, Diana and Bullo, Peter},
TITLE = {Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?},
JOURNAL = {Current Research in Public Health},
VOLUME = {1},
YEAR = {2021},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {1-9},
URL = {/10.31586/ojms-1-1-110.31586/ojms/1/1/1},
ISSN = {2831-5162},
DOI = {10.31586/ojms.2021.010101},
ABSTRACT = {Patients with comorbid neurotic and anxiety disorders are more receptive of the discomfort accompanying continuous positive airway pressure therapy than average obstructive sleep apnea patients. The purpose of the study was to analyze short-term and long-term continuous positive airway pressure therapy adherence data of patients with obstructive sleep apnea and comorbid anxiety and stress-related dyssomnias, as this group of disorders is expected to rise in the post-covid era. Study retrospectively analyzed clinical outcomes of obstructive sleep apnea patients. All subjects with obstructive sleep apnea were diagnosed based on in-lab video polysomnography, further referred to CPAP titration and were invited for regular follow-up visits. The results showed that subjects with comorbid obstructive sleep apnea and anxiety-related disorders used ventilation therapy more hours per day (6,690 hours/day vs. 5,000 hours/day, ****p<0,0001, anxiety (n=19) vs. controls (n=60)). Patients from the anxiety group remained longer in our therapy program (7,086 years vs. 2,905 years, ****p<0,0001) and had markedly better control over their weight, as the body-mass index of the control group increased by +1,065 kg/m2 per year and the body-mass index in the examination group increased only by +0,296 kg/m2 every year. Our data document that obstructive sleep apnea patients on ventilation therapy, who do not have enough control over their increasing body weight might highly benefit from therapy approaches similar to patients with anxiety-related dyssomnias and that management of obstructive sleep apnea is not an obstacle in concomitant treatment of neurotic and anxiety-related dyssomnias.},
}
%0 Journal Article
%A Gavliakova, Silvia
%A Bellova, Vladimira
%A Vitazkova, Diana
%A Bullo, Peter
%D 2021
%J Current Research in Public Health

%@ 2831-5162
%V 1
%N 1
%P 1-9

%T Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?
%M doi:10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
%U /10.31586/ojms-1-1-110.31586/ojms/1/1/1
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Gavliakova, Silvia
AU  - Bellova, Vladimira
AU  - Vitazkova, Diana
AU  - Bullo, Peter
TI  - Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?
T2  - Current Research in Public Health
PY  - 2021
VL  - 1
IS  - 1
SN  - 2831-5162
SP  - 1
EP  - 9
UR  - /10.31586/ojms-1-1-110.31586/ojms/1/1/1
AB  - Patients with comorbid neurotic and anxiety disorders are more receptive of the discomfort accompanying continuous positive airway pressure therapy than average obstructive sleep apnea patients. The purpose of the study was to analyze short-term and long-term continuous positive airway pressure therapy adherence data of patients with obstructive sleep apnea and comorbid anxiety and stress-related dyssomnias, as this group of disorders is expected to rise in the post-covid era. Study retrospectively analyzed clinical outcomes of obstructive sleep apnea patients. All subjects with obstructive sleep apnea were diagnosed based on in-lab video polysomnography, further referred to CPAP titration and were invited for regular follow-up visits. The results showed that subjects with comorbid obstructive sleep apnea and anxiety-related disorders used ventilation therapy more hours per day (6,690 hours/day vs. 5,000 hours/day, ****p<0,0001, anxiety (n=19) vs. controls (n=60)). Patients from the anxiety group remained longer in our therapy program (7,086 years vs. 2,905 years, ****p<0,0001) and had markedly better control over their weight, as the body-mass index of the control group increased by +1,065 kg/m2 per year and the body-mass index in the examination group increased only by +0,296 kg/m2 every year. Our data document that obstructive sleep apnea patients on ventilation therapy, who do not have enough control over their increasing body weight might highly benefit from therapy approaches similar to patients with anxiety-related dyssomnias and that management of obstructive sleep apnea is not an obstacle in concomitant treatment of neurotic and anxiety-related dyssomnias.
DO  - Long term data on obstructive sleep apnea treatment in insomnia and anxiety related disorders - importance in the post-covid19 era?
TI  - 10.31586/ojms.2021.010101
ER  -