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THE EUROPEAN SLEEP APNOEA DATABASE (ESADA) -- Report from 22 European Sleep Laboratories

Authors :
Jan Hedner
A. Vitols
M. Pretl
Pawel Sliwinski
Ingo Fietze
John-Arthur Kvamme
Daniel Rodenstein
Ruzena Tkacova
Juan F. Masa
Marisa Bonsignore
Thomas Penzel
Ludger Grote
Ferran Barbé
J.M. Montserrat
Renata L. Riha
Rainer Schulz
Jan Zieliński
Walter Mcnicholas Mcnicholas
W DeBacker
Pierre Escourrou
Tarja Saaresranta
Marrone O
H. Vrints
Peretz Lavie
Giedrius Varoneckas
Carolina Lombardi
Gianfranco Parati
Hedner, J
Grote, L
Bonsignore, MR
McNicholas, W
Lavie, P
Parati, G
Sliwinski, P
Barbé, F
Escourrou, P
Fietze, I
Masa, JF
Kvamme, JA
Lombardi, C
Marrone, O
Montserrat, JM
Penzel, T
Pretl, M
Riha, R
Rodenstein, D
Saaresranta, T
Schulz, R
Tkacova, R
Varoneckas, G
Vitols, A
Vrints, H
Zielinski, J
UCL - SSS/IREC/PNEU - Pôle de Pneumologie, ORL et Dermatologie
UCL - (SLuc) Service de pneumologie
Bonsignore, M
Mcnicholas, W
Masa, J
Kvamme, J
Montserrat, J
Debacker, W
Source :
The European Respiratory Journal, Vol. 38, no. 3, p. 635-642 (2011), The European respiratory journal
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
European Respiratory Society, 2011.

Abstract

The European Sleep Apnoea Database (ESADA) reflects a network of 22 sleep disorder centres in Europe enabled by a COST action B26 programme. This ongoing project aims to describe differences in standard clinical care of patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and to establish a resource for genetic research in this disorder. Patients with suspected OSA are consecutively included and followed up according to local clinical standards. Anthropometrics, medical history, medication, daytime symptoms and sleep data (polysomnography or cardiorespiratory polygraphy) are recorded in a structured web-based report form. 5,103 patients (1,426 females, mean±SD age 51.8±12.6 yrs, 79.4% with apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) ≥5 events·h -1) were included from March 15, 2007 to August 1, 2009. Morbid obesity (body mass index ≥35 kg·m -2) was present in 21.1% of males and 28.6% of females. Cardiovascular, metabolic and pulmonary comorbidities were frequent (49.1%, 32.9% and 14.2%, respectively). Patients investigated with a polygraphic method had a lower AHI than those undergoing polysomnography (23.2±23.5 versus 29.1±26.3 events·h -1, p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09031936
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The European Respiratory Journal, Vol. 38, no. 3, p. 635-642 (2011), The European respiratory journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd2c4782af5c0164a69b9d171174cce5