Adaptation to nocturnal intermittent hypoxia in sleep-disordered breathing: 2,3 diphosphoglycerate levels: a preliminary study
Loading...
Date
2002
Authors
Öztürk, Levent Mukadder
Mansour, Banu
Pelin, Zerrin
Çelikoğlu, Firuz
Gökhan, Nuran
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Open Access Color
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Abstract
An inexpensive method for determining significant sleep-related hypoxemia would be beneficial for patients being investigated and treated for sleep-disordered breathing in order to distinguish hypoxic patients from those without nocturnal hypoxemia. Since 2,3 diphosphoglycerate (DPG) which profoundly affects dissociation of O2 from hemoglobin is an instrumental substance in determining the O2 affinity of blood it becomes important to consider in what extent the nocturnal intermittent hypoxemia may change the levels of 2,3 DPG. In this study we tested the hypothesis that 2,3 DPG levels of hypoxic SDB patients may be higher than that of nonhypoxic SDB patients and normal controls. Fourteen SDB patients were participated the study seven with hypoxia (hypoxic group) who spent more than 10 minutes during sleep with SaO2<90% (mean 71 minutes) and seven SDB patients (nonhypoxic group) who spent less than 10 minutes during sleep with SaO2<90% (mean 6 minutes). Seven healthy non-smoking subjects were included as a control group. After giving informed consent all participants underwent a venous blood sampling performed between 07:00 and 08:00 a.m. Blood 2,3 DPG levels were measured by using spectrophotometry. 2,3 DPG levels were 1.84±0.44 1.68±0.18 and 1.71±0.11 mmol/mL in hypoxic nonhypoxic and control groups respectively (p>0.05). In conclusion to our knowledge this is the first study that has evaluated 2,3 DPG levels in hypoxic and nonhypoxic types of SDB patients. Chronic intermittent hypoxia which is entirely a different entity from sustained hypoxia did not lead to increases in 2,3 DPG levels in both hypoxic and nonhypoxic SDB patients.
Description
Keywords
2,3 diphosphoglycerate, Intermittent hypoxia, Oxyhemoglobin desaturation, Sleep apnea
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
0
WoS Q
N/A
Scopus Q
Q4
Source
Volume
4
Issue
4
Start Page
143
End Page
148