M. Gugger et T. Rochat, SHOULD PATIENTS WITH ASYMPTOMATIC SLEEP-A PNEA SYNDROME BE TREATED WITH CPAP, Schweizerische medizinische Wochenschrift, 125(10), 1995, pp. 496-501
Treatment of sleep apnea patients may be justified even when symptoms
are absent. On the one hand, hypersomnia or daytime sleepiness are sub
jective symptoms and only reflect one aspect of the clinical syndrome
of sleep apnea. On the other hand, an apnea index in excess of 5, e.g.
the ''laboratory diagnosis'' of sleep apnea, has been reported as an
independent risk factor for myocardial infarction. The main problem is
scientific definition of cut-off points for treatment. There is no co
ntroversy about whether patients with symptoms should be treated or no
t. A CPAP trial seems to be justified in asymptomatic patients with an
apnea/hypopnea index in excess of 20-30 and in patients with cardiova
scular risk factors when the apnea/hypopnea index is in excess of 5. T
hese laboratory cut-off values are not absolute values but represent f
lexible guidelines for initiating a CPAP trial in asymptomatic apneics
. The reasons for uncertainty whether or not to treat patients with as
ymptomatic sleep apnea are discussed.