Abstract

Sleep-induced hypoventilation is caused partly by inadequate compensation for elevated upper airway resistance (UAR). Some evidence suggests that the effect of UAR on ventilation may vary among individuals. The relationship between minute ventilation (VI) and UAR was examined in 26 healthy young men (average of 10.12 sleep onsets). Variables were analyzed over transitions between wakefulness (defined by alpha electroencephalographic activity) and sleep (theta electroencephalographic activity). Transitions to sleep were associated with increases in UAR in synchrony with reductions in VI, and equally rapid opposite changes occurred with awakenings. The relationship between the magnitudes of the changes in VI and UAR at transitions varied among subjects, accounting for 30% of the variance for alpha-to-theta transitions and 50% of the variance for theta-to-alpha transitions. Results indicated that, although ventilatory changes during sleep onset are partly a consequence of changes in UAR, alterations in UAR do not account fully for alterations in VI. Other factors that may contribute to ventilatory instability during sleep onset include state-related fluctuations in drive to the primary respiratory muscles and variability in compensatory mechanisms.

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