COPD (Dec 2023)

Sleep Hypoventilation is Common in Diurnal Normocapnic COPD Patients with Severe or Very Severe Obstruction and is Not Associated with Body Mass Index

  • Safir Zewari,
  • Bram van den Borst,
  • Michel van den Heuvel,
  • Frank van den Elshout,
  • Manu Sastry,
  • Petra Vos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15412555.2023.2215324
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 210 – 215

Abstract

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Sleep hypoventilation (SH) is common in COPD patients with diurnal hypercapnia, however there are little data on the presence of SH in COPD patients with diurnal normocapnia. In this study the prevalence of SH in stable normocapnic COPD patients with severe or very severe obstruction (GOLD stages III and IV) was evaluated across body mass index (BMI) classes and associations between SH and body composition measures were explored. A total of 56 diurnal normocapnic COPD patients, of whom 17 normal-weight (COPDNW), 18 overweight (COPDOW) and 21 obese (COPDOB), underwent polysomnography to objectify SH and bioelectrical impedance analysis to assess body composition. The overall prevalence of SH was 66.1% and was not different across BMI classes. Logistic regression models indicated that SH was not associated with waist-to-hip ratio, body fat percentage and fat-free mass index. Our data indicate that SH is common in diurnal normocapnic COPD patients with severe or very severe obstruction and is not associated with BMI or body composition.

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