PURPOSE: Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), as defined by Centers of Disease Control criteria, often have a potentially treatable sleep disorder. However, even when obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is identified in these patients, improvement with treatment is not predictable. We sought to determine whether any parameters of the diagnostic or titration sleep study were associated with improvement in symptoms of CFS after a subsequent trial of home CPAP.
METHODS: We reviewed the clinical and polysomnographic (PSG) findings of 78 patients with CFS. Thirty-nine (50%) were found to have OSA and underwent a CPAP titration night. Thirty-seven pts subsequently agreed to a therapeutic CPAP trial lasting up to 6 months. They then rated their CFS symptoms as "improved" or "not-improved".
RESULTS: In the diagnostic PSG, patients with CFS who reported improvement to later CPAP had a higher mean arousal index 67.6 (70.1) vs. 26.1 (12.1) in those who did not improve (p = 0.037). The following table compares several PSG variables inpatients who improved with the CPAP trial compared with those who did not. Each value represents the change between the diagnostic and CPAP titration nights (mean and standard deviation).
CONCLUSION: Patients with CFS and OSA are more likely to improve with CPAP if they have higher arousal indices in the diagnostic PSG and show improved sleep efficiency during CPAP titration. Changes in REM latency and stage 1 and 2 sleep may also predict improvement.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: The above mentioned PSG variables may be clinically useful in predicting which patients with CFS and OSA are more likely to improve with CPAP use.
DISCLOSURE: Marcel Baltzan, None.
Marcel A. Baltzan MD * Osama Elkhouli MD Laura Creti PhD Sally Bailes PhD Catherine Fichten PhD Norman Wolkove MD Eva Libman PhD Mount Sinai Hospital Center, Montreal, PQ, Canada
COPYRIGHT 2005 American College of Chest Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group