Mild Intermittent Hypoxia and Its Multipronged Effect on Sleep Apnea
Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Spinal Cord Injuries
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Obstructive Sleep Apnea focused on measuring Mild Intermittent Hypoxia, Continuous positive airway pressure therapy
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Body mass index < 40 kg/m^2.
- 18 to 60 years old.
- Newly diagnosed sleep apnea (i.e. apnea/hypopnea index < 100 events per hour - average nocturnal oxygen saturation > 85 %) that has not been treated.
- Diagnosed with prehypertension or Stage 1 hypertension as categorized by the American Heart Association
- Not pregnant.
- Normal lung function.
- Minimal alcohol consumption (i.e. no more than the equivalent of a glass of wine/day)
- A typical sleep/wake schedule (i.e. participants will not be night shift workers or have recently travelled across time zones).
- For spinal cord injured participants (Aim-2): incomplete spinal cord lesions at C3 or below and above T12 (greater than 36 mos. post-SCI) without joint contractures but with signs of voluntary ankle, knee and hip movements and the ability to ambulate at least one step without human assistance.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Any disease other than high blood pressure and sleep apnea.
- Medications for high blood pressure and sleep promoting supplements including melatonin
- Current effective CPAP usage (greater than 4 hours per night).
- Night Shift workers or recently traveled across time zones.
Sites / Locations
- John D Dingell VA Medical CenterRecruiting
- Wayne State UniversityRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Sham Comparator
Experimental Group
Control Group
The experimental group is comprised of participants with OSA and hypertension [either able bodied (Aim 1) or with spinal cord injury (Aim 2)] that will be treated with mild IH and CPAP. In the present proposal, the mild IH protocol will be administered during wakefulness each day for 15 days over a 3-week period to participants that will also be treated with CPAP during sleep. The mild IH protocol will be comprised of a 20-minute baseline period followed by exposure to twelve - two minute episodes of hypoxia [partial pressure of end-tidal oxygen (PETO2) = 50 mmHg]. Each episode will be interspersed with a 2-minute recovery period under normoxic conditions. The PETCO2 will be sustained 2 mmHg above baseline values for the last ten minutes of baseline and throughout the remainder of the protocol.
The control group is comprised of hypertensive OSA participants [either able bodied (Aim 1) or with spinal cord injury (Aim 2)] that will be exposed to a sham protocol in addition to being treated with CPAP during sleep. The sham protocol will be administered during wakefulness for 15 days over a 3-week period. During the sham protocol the participants will be exposed to atmospheric levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide for the duration of the protocol.