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Zolpidem increases sleep efficiency and the respiratory arousal threshold without changing sleep apnoea severity and pharyngeal muscle activity
Author(s) -
Messineo Ludovico,
Eckert Danny J.,
Lim Richard,
Chiang Alan,
Azarbarzin Ali,
Carter Sophie G.,
Carberry Jayne C.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jp280173
Subject(s) - zolpidem , arousal , medicine , anesthesia , alertness , hypnotic , continuous positive airway pressure , apnea , polysomnography , obstructive sleep apnea , pharyngeal muscles , sleep (system call) , placebo , sleep apnea , airway , psychology , insomnia , psychiatry , neuroscience , alternative medicine , pathology , computer science , operating system
Key points A decreased respiratory arousal threshold is one of the main contributors to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) pathogenesis. Several recent studies have sought to find a drug capable of increasing the respiratory arousal threshold without impairing pharyngeal muscle activity to reduce OSA severity, with variable success. Here we show that zolpidem increases the respiratory arousal threshold by ∼15%, an effect size which was insufficient to systematically decrease OSA severity as measured by the apnoea‐hypopnoea index. Unlike recent physiological findings that showed paradoxical increases in pharyngeal muscle responsiveness during transient manipulations of airway pressure, zolpidem did not alter pharyngeal muscle responsiveness during natural sleep. It did, however, increase sleep efficiency without changing apnoea length, oxygen desaturation, next‐day perceived sleepiness and alertness. These novel findings indicate that zolpidem was well tolerated and effective in promoting sleep in people with OSA, which may be therapeutically useful for people with OSA and comorbid insomnia.Abstract A recent physiology study performed using continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) manipulations indicated that the hypnotic zolpidem increases the arousal threshold and genioglossus responsiveness in people with and without obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). Thus, zolpidem may stabilise breathing and reduce OSA severity without CPAP. Accordingly, we sought to determine the effects of zolpidem on OSA severity, upper airway physiology and next‐day sleepiness and alertness. Nineteen people with OSA with low‐to‐moderate arousal threshold received 10 mg zolpidem or placebo according to a double‐blind, randomised, cross‐over design. Participants completed two overnight in‐laboratory polysomnographies (1‐week washout), with an epiglottic catheter, intramuscular genioglossus electromyography, nasal mask and pneumotachograph to measure OSA severity, arousal threshold and upper airway muscle responsiveness. Next‐morning sleepiness and alertness were also assessed. Zolpidem did not change the apnoea‐hypopnoea index versus placebo (40.6 ± 12.3 vs . 40.3 ± 16.4 events/h (means ± SD), p =  0.938) or nadir oxyhaemoglobin saturation (79.6 ± 6.6 vs . 79.7 ± 7.4%,  p =  0.932), but was well tolerated. Zolpidem increased sleep efficiency by 9 ± 14% (83 ± 11 vs . 73 ± 17%, p =  0.010). Arousal threshold increased by 15 ± 5% with zolpidem throughout all sleep stages ( p =  0.010), whereas genioglossus muscle responsiveness did not change. Next‐morning sleepiness and alertness were not different between nights. In summary, a single night of 10 mg zolpidem is well tolerated and does not cause next‐day impairment in alertness or sleepiness, or overnight hypoxaemia in OSA. However, despite increases in arousal threshold without any change in pharyngeal muscle responsiveness, zolpidem does not alter OSA severity. It does, however, increase sleep efficiency by ∼10%, which may be beneficial in people with OSA and insomnia.

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