PEDIATRICS Vol. 56 No. 6 December 1975, pp. 967-971
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Nasopharyngitis and Prolonged Sleep Apnea

Alfred Steinschneider M.D., Ph.D.1

1 Department of Pediatrics, State University of New York, Upstate Medical Center, Syracuse

The effect of nasopharyngitis on the simultaneous occurrence of prolonged sleep apnea (ge20 seconds in duration) was studied in 26 infants managed at home on an apnea monitor. During the observation period, these infants had a total of 69 illnesses which appeared to represent an upper respiratory tract inflammatory process. In general, the daily frequency of prolonged apneic episodes was significantly greater during nasopharyngitis when compared to comparable time intervals immediately prior to and following the illness. In addition, there was a decrease in the frequency of apneic episodes with increasing postnatal age until the episodes finally ceased to occur during the illnessreleted intervals. Apneic episodes ceased to occur at an earher age for the before- and after-illness intervals than for the time interval during which there were clinical symptoms. Thus, it would appear that infants go through an agerelated phase wherein prolonged apnea occurs during nasopharyngitis but not when free of illness.

The implications of these results for the management of infants having prolonged sleep apnea are discussed. In view of the hypothesis that prolonged sleep apnea is part of the physiological process resulting in the sudden infant death syndrome, these results also provide for the prediction that infants who suddenly die in association with nasopharynqitis would do so, in general, at a later age than those who succumb when free of an upper respiratory tract inflammatory tory process.

Submitted on April 7, 1975
Accepted on June 2, 1975




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