1. High frequency region of the snore spectra carry important information on the disease of sleep apnoea.
- Author
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Emoto, T., Abeyratne, U. R., Akutagawa, M., Konaka, S., and Kinouchi, Y.
- Subjects
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SLEEP apnea syndromes , *SNORING , *POLYSOMNOGRAPHY , *POWER spectra , *BANDWIDTHS , *PHYSIOLOGY , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Snoring is the most common symptom of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). Several researchers have reported differences between the power spectra of non-OSA and OSA snorers. The traditional approach over the years has been to record snore sounds at a bandwidth of < 5 kHz. Narrowing of the upper airways during OSA events and the resulting upward shift of snore frequencies also lend support to the idea of examining snore sounds beyond 5 kHz. In this paper, we compute the power spectra of snores in three different bands defined as: low-frequency band (LFB: < 5 kHz); middle-frequency band (MFB: 5-10 kHz) and high-frequency band (HFB: 10-20 kHz). We illustrate that there is a significant difference between non-OSA snorers (Apnoea Hypopnoea Index (AHI) < 10) and OSA snorers (AHI > 10) in the region > 5 kHz. We then develop a feature to diagnose OSA based on the spectral differences in the high frequency region and evaluate its performance on a database of 20 subjects. Our results strongly suggest that the high-frequency region of the snore sounds carry information, hitherto disregarded, on the disease of sleep apnoea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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