Abstract

Abstract Introduction A couple of studies investigated the energy balance in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) but the results were inconclusive. Moreover, OSA have been associated with visceral adiposity but the mechanism has not been fully elucidated. We hypothesized that OSA was associated with lower basal metabolic rate (BMR) and increased nutrition intake which further attributed to body adiposity. The aim of the present study is to determine the association between OSA, and BMR, nutrition intake, and body composition (BC). Methods Patients were recruited from referrals to sleep lab for suspect OSA. Measurement of the BMR with indirect calorimetry and BC with bioelectrical impedance analysis, and blood sampling were conducted in the morning next to the overnight polysomnography. Afterward, participants were evaluated with short -form IPAQ, 3-day intake dietary, 7-day sleep log, and wore Actiwatch for 7 days. The outcomes are resting energy expenditure (REE) and respiratory quotien (RQ), total fat mass (TFM), fat free mass (FFM), nutrition intake, daily total activity count, nightly sleep hour, and hormone. The association between OSA □apnea hypopnea index (AHI) >=15/h□ and REE, RQ, TFM, and FFM was analyzed with multivariable linear regression. Results 85 patients were enrolled with median age 41.7 y/o, 78.6% male, body mass index (BMI) 25.4 kg/m2, and AHI 28.8/h. Compared to no OSA, patients with OSA had higher BMI, RQ, TFM, activity count, and similar age, gender, REE, FFM, nutrition intake, sleep hour, cortisol, leptin, and Ghrelin. OSA was independently associated with RQ (coefficient 0.031; 95% CI 0.004-0.057, p=0.022) with adjustment of age, gender, BMI, and activity count but not associated with REE, TFM, and FFM. Conclusion Though OSA may be associated with metabolic dysregulation, it was not associated with energy balance and BC. Further validation of the findings in a large scale and multi-ethnicity cohort to validate the findings of the present study is warranted. Support (if any) National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan (NST 111-2314-B-002-293; MOST 109-2314-B-002-252); Ministry of Education (NTU-107L900502, 108L900502, 109L900502)”, National Taiwan University Hospital (NTHU 108-S4331, 109-42, 111-S0298, 111-X0033); MediaTek Inc. (201802034 RIPD), and LARGAN Health AI-Tec CO., Ltd (202003021 RIPB)

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