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Sex Differences in Obstructive Sleep Apnea by Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis.
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2021 April
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Obesity is known of one of the risk factors for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Although body mass index (BMI) can be an indicator for obesity, it does not represent the actual body composition of fat or muscle. We hypothesized that bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) can help analyze the fat and muscle distributions in males and females with OSA.
METHODS: This study screened subjects who visited the Department of Neurology, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea due to sleep disturbances with symptoms suggestive of OSA from December 2017 to December 2019. All subjects underwent overnight type I polysomnography (PSG) and BIA.
RESULTS: PSG and BIA were completed in 2,064 OSA patients who had an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of ≥5/hour (77.1% males and 22.9% females). The females had remarkably higher fat indicators and lower muscle indicators. The AHI was significant correlated with all BIA parameters in all OSA patients: body fat mass (ρ=0.286, p <0.001), percentage body fat (ρ=0.130, p <0.001), visceral fat area (VFA) (ρ=0.257, p <0.001), muscle mass (ρ=0.275, p <0.001), and skeletal muscle mass (SMM) (ρ=0.270, p <0.001). The correlations in males were similar to those in all patients, where those in females were not. In females with OSA, all of the BIA fat indicators were correlated with AHI, whereas the muscle indicators were not. Adjusting age and BMI when analyzing the SMM/VFA ratio showed a strong correlation in males with OSA ( p =0.015) but not in females with OSA ( p =0.354).
CONCLUSIONS: This study has revealed that the body composition of fat and muscle has different patterns in OSA patients. The SMM/VFA as measured using BIA is the factor most significantly associated with AHI in males but not in females after adjusting for age and BMI.
METHODS: This study screened subjects who visited the Department of Neurology, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea due to sleep disturbances with symptoms suggestive of OSA from December 2017 to December 2019. All subjects underwent overnight type I polysomnography (PSG) and BIA.
RESULTS: PSG and BIA were completed in 2,064 OSA patients who had an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of ≥5/hour (77.1% males and 22.9% females). The females had remarkably higher fat indicators and lower muscle indicators. The AHI was significant correlated with all BIA parameters in all OSA patients: body fat mass (ρ=0.286, p <0.001), percentage body fat (ρ=0.130, p <0.001), visceral fat area (VFA) (ρ=0.257, p <0.001), muscle mass (ρ=0.275, p <0.001), and skeletal muscle mass (SMM) (ρ=0.270, p <0.001). The correlations in males were similar to those in all patients, where those in females were not. In females with OSA, all of the BIA fat indicators were correlated with AHI, whereas the muscle indicators were not. Adjusting age and BMI when analyzing the SMM/VFA ratio showed a strong correlation in males with OSA ( p =0.015) but not in females with OSA ( p =0.354).
CONCLUSIONS: This study has revealed that the body composition of fat and muscle has different patterns in OSA patients. The SMM/VFA as measured using BIA is the factor most significantly associated with AHI in males but not in females after adjusting for age and BMI.
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