Abstract
The critical issue in considering the diagnosis and management of CSA is to determine the physiologic process underlying the disorder. CSA includes a pathophysiologically and clinically heterogeneous group of disorders that can be divided into two main groups on the basis of the awake PaCO2: a hypercapnic group, in whom the disorder is related to central alveolar hypoventilation or neuromuscular disease, and a nonhypercapnic group, in whom there is no identifiable underlying disorder. The common feature of these two groups is recurrent episodes of central apnea during sleep related to withdrawal of the wakefulness drive to breathing. In the hypercapnic group the clinical history is dominated by recurrent episodes of respiratory failure and its complications, with the sleep disturbance being a secondary feature. CSA in these patients is simply an exaggeration, by sleep, of their hypoventilation disorder. Treatment in most cases involves mechanical assisted ventilation during sleep, which can be very effective in reversing CSA and respiratory failure. In contrast, idiopathic CSA is characterized by a tendency to hyperventilation. This tendency is reinforced during sleep by recurrent arousals, which tend to propagate the CSA. Unlike hypercapnic CSA, idiopathic CSA is a relatively benign condition in which cardiorespiratory failure is not a feature. Treatment of this disorder is problematic, but the use of nocturnal nasal CPAP appears to be quite effective.
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