Abstract

Previous study showed that in individuals with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the contractions of masseter muscles after respiratory events can be nonspecific motor phenomena, dependent on the duration of respiratory arousals rather than the occurrence of the respiratory events. However, the role of intermittent hypoxia in the occurrence of jaw-closing muscle activities (JCMAs) was not taken into consideration. An exposure to intermittent hypoxia has been shown to initiate a series of activities, including muscular sympathetic activity in patients with OSA. To determine the effects of mandibular advancement appliance (MAA) therapy on JCMA time-related to oxygen desaturation with and without arousal in individuals with OSA. Eighteen individuals with OSA (age: 49.4 ± 9.8 years, apnea-hypopnea index (AHI): 10.0|18.4|30.3, JCMA index: 1.7|4.3|5.6), participated in a randomised controlled crossover clinical trial, in which two ambulatory polysomnographic recordings were performed: one with MAA in situ and the other without MAA in situ. JCMAs were recorded bilaterally from both masseter and temporalis muscles. There was no significant effect of the MAA on the overall JCMA index (Z=-1.372, p=.170). With the MAA in situ, JCMA index time-related to oxygen desaturation with arousal significantly decreased (Z=-2.657, p=.008), while there was no significant effect of the MAA on the JCMA index time-related to oxygen desaturation without arousal (Z=-0.680, p=.496). Effective mandibular advancement appliance therapy significantly reduces jaw-closing muscle activities time-related to oxygen desaturation with arousal in individuals with OSA.

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