Skip to main content

Obstructive sleep apnoea is associated with dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse: results of a 10-year multi-centre retrospective analysis

Abstract

Background

Disproportionate bulging of the pars membranosa into the central airway on expiration, now termed ‘excessive dynamic airway collapse’ (EDAC), has poorly characterised significance. Despite physiological arguments supporting an association between obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse, this is unproven.

Methods

An audit was conducted of patients having had both a dynamic CT chest and a diagnostic polysomnogram between 2009 and 2018 and within 2 years of one another. Dynamic airway collapse was quantified by the presence of EDAC (≥75% collapse) at any of five sites plus a composite index of mean cross-sectional area (CSA) change. Linear regression models were used to assess associations between pre-defined variables.

Results

A total of 59 patients was included. Median apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) was 13 events/hour (IQR: 5–31 events/hour | range 0–153 events/hour). EDAC was not identified. Median composite dynamic airway collapse index was 18% (IQR: 9–30% | range: 0–63%). Unadjusted and adjusted linear regression analyses demonstrated statistically significant associations between degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and multiple OSA indices. In the adjusted model, every 10% worsening in dynamic airway collapse was associated with an increase in apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) of 5 events/hour (95% confidence interval: 0.9–10 events/hour | p = 0.019). No association was found between dynamic airway collapse and symptoms or healthcare utilisation.

Conclusions

This study supports an association between dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and OSA, despite the failure to identify EDAC, which was likely due to retrospectively audited CT scans not being performed to research standards.

Introduction

Excessive central airway collapse (ECAC) is caused either by structural deficiency of airway cartilage (tracheobronchomalacia) or by disproportionate bulging of the pars membranosa into the airway lumen (excessive dynamic airway collapse | ‘EDAC’) with preservation of the semicircular configuration of the cartilaginous anterolateral central airway. Although the phenomenon of EDAC has been long recognised, inconsistent terminology and definitions of severity have previously impeded progress. A classification system has been proposed and the threshold for abnormal collapse in healthy volunteers has been more rigorously defined, being a ≥ 75% reduction in cross-sectional airway area (CSA) on spirometry-controlled dynamic CT chest (Murgu & Colt, 2007; Boiselle et al., 2009; O’Donnell et al., 2012; Litmanovich et al., 2010). Nonetheless understanding of EDAC remains incomplete and, importantly, the association of this condition with other comorbidities and respiratory symptoms remains uncertain (Murg & Colt, 2013; Matus et al., 2016).

Pathophysiological principles suggest an association should exist between EDAC and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). Repetitive tension generated by inspiratory efforts against an occluded upper airway in sleep could promote the development of EDAC. Chronic airway inflammation from associated micro-aspiration could also contribute to reduced elasticity. Only three studies have examined links between the two conditions, with mixed results (Ehtisham et al., 2015; Kolakowski et al., 2018; Good et al., 2018). These studies have important limitations including the conceptualisation and analysis of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway behaviour as a categorical phenomenon, with collapse of the pars membranosa being either ‘normal’ or ‘excessive’ but with no gradation in between; this arbitrarily simplifies the inherently continuous nature of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse, overvalues the strength of the research that has defined the threshold for pathological collapse, and limits nuance in what remains an exploratory area of investigation. Potential associations between OSA and degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse clearly warrant further study.

We hypothesised that EDAC (as a categorical variable) would be associated with OSA. Additionally, noting the limitations of earlier studies, we hypothesised that degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse (as a continuous variable) would be associated with OSA. Separately, we hypothesised that both EDAC and degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse would be associated with increased symptom burden and / or healthcare utilisation.

Materials and methods

Study design

This multi-centre retrospective audit was approved by the local research ethics committee (Central Adelaide Local Health Network Research Ethics Committee approval number 137). Inclusion criteria were (a) dynamic CT chest for any indication between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2018 at any public hospital in the state, (b) diagnostic polysomnography (level 1 or 2) within 2 years of the dynamic CT chest and (c) available records for audit.

We excluded patients with known tracheobronchomalacia or risk factors for this separate form of ECAC (being current or previous tracheostomy, compressive lesion, relapsing polychronditis and cystic fibrosis).

Diagnostic investigations

Dynamic CT chest

The retrospective nature of this audit, its chronological duration and the inclusion of multiple sites renders it impossible to describe the technical specifics of each scanner. Dynamic CT chest involved acquisition of images at full inspiration and full expiration. Patients were coached to perform breathing manoeuvres by radiographers, however spirometry-control and respiratory physiologist supervision were not employed.

CTs were reviewed in Picture Archiving Communications System / Radiology Information System (Carestream Health Systems, Version 11.4.1102, Rochester, New York). Fine slice axial inspiratory images were reviewed in lung windows (window: 1500 / level: − 600) after multiplanar reconstruction. Following double-oblique alignment to the axis of the airway, CSA measurements were acquired using the Freehand ROI tool at five locations, being: mid-trachea (10 mm above level of aortic arch), lower trachea (10 mm above level of carina), left main bronchus (10 mm distal to origin), right main bronchus (10 mm distal to origin) and bronchus intermedius (10 mm distal to origin). These measurements were then repeated on expiratory images (fine slice where available) following multiplanar reconstruction and double-oblique alignment as described. The morphology of the posterior tracheal wall at the level of the mid-tracheal measurement was classified as concave, straight or convex to provide a surrogate measure of degree of expiratory effort. All analysis was performed by a radiology registrar after proctoring from a consultant radiologist.

EDAC was defined as a categorical variable (either present or not) and was indicated by a ≥ 75% dynamic reduction in airway CSA at any of the five central airway sites. Degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse was defined as a continuous variable from a minimum of 0% collapse to a maximum of 100% collapse and was comprised of the mean percentage reduction in airway CSA across all five sites.

Diagnostic polysomnography

Level 1 diagnostic polysomnograms (PSGs) occurred in accredited overnight attended laboratories with the following: three electroencephalogram (EEG) signals, bilateral electro-oculogram, chin electromyogram (EMG), electrocardiogram, bilateral lower limb EMG, nasal pressure, nasal thermistor, chest and abdominal piezometers, external tracheal microphone, peripheral pulse oximetry and infra-red video recording. Level 2 diagnostic PSGs occurred in unattended home environments and utilised all of the same signals except with the following differences: one EEG signal (with one back-up signal), no thermistor, vibration via nasal cannulae for snore instead of external microphone, automated body position sensing and no video recording. All studies were scored by accredited sleep scientists in accordance with contemporaneous American Academy of Sleep Medicine guidelines and were reported by consultant sleep physicians.

Chart review

Patient notes were reviewed to collect demographics (age, gender, body mass index [BMI], smoking status), symptoms (dyspnoea, cough, excess mucus production), comorbid conditions (asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD], gastro-oesophageal reflux disease [GORD]), healthcare utilisation (public emergency department presentations, public hospital inpatient admission days, bronchoscopy, death) and pulmonary function test results. Data chronologically closest to the diagnostic PSG were preferenced.

Statistical analysis

Binary logistic models were employed to examine associations between the categorical variable of EDAC and OSA. Linear regression models were used to test associations between the continuous variable of degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and OSA.

Indices used to reflect OSA were apnoea hypopnoea index (AHI), supine AHI, respiratory disturbance index (RDI), oxygen 3% desaturation index (ODI) and average peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) in sleep.

Unadjusted and adjusted linear regression models were performed. Potential confounders were pre-defined to include age, gender, BMI, asthma, COPD, GORD, post-bronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 sec (FEV1) as percentage of predicted and post-bronchodilator forced vital capacity (FVC) as percentage of predicted.

Bivariate linear regressions were first performed with one possible confounder in each model. Multivariate linear regression models were then created by including all potential confounders with P value < 0.2 on bivariate regression. Backwards elimination was then performed, removing the confounder with the highest P value one at a time until all P values were less than 0.05, thereby giving the most parsimonious and efficient multivariate models.

Binary logistic and negative binomial regressions were performed to assess associations between symptoms and healthcare utilisation and the categorical variable of EDAC and, separately, between the same outcomes and the continuous variable of degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse. Unadjusted and adjusted regression models were then performed with the adjusted models including those outcomes found to be associated with EDAC in the analysis for OSA as described above.

Indices reflecting symptoms were dyspnoea (World Health Organisation functional class), cough (yes / no) and excess mucus production (yes / no). Indices used to reflect healthcare utilisation were public emergency department presentations (rate per year), public hospital inpatient admission days (days per year), bronchoscopy (yes / no) and death (yes / no).

Linear regression with logarithmic transformation was used to test whether there was a systematic bias in AHI between level 1 and level 2 studies.

P value < 0.05 was defined apriori as indicating statistical significance. Data were compiled in Excel (Microsoft, version 1905, Redmond, Washington). Statistical analysis was performed using SAS (SAS Institute Incorporated, version 9.4, Cary, North Carolina).

Results

A total of 61 patients met inclusion criteria but two were excluded (both had cystic fibrosis), leaving 59 patients for assessment. Median age was 62 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 51–70 years) and 59% were female. Median BMI was 33 kg/m2 (IQR: 30–38 kg/m2). Most patients were reformed smokers (27 patients | 46%) or never smokers (22 patients | 37%) with a minority actively smoking (10 patients | 17%). Median pack-year history in active and reformed smokers was 23 pack-years (IQR 16–33 pack-years).

The comorbidities, symptoms, healthcare utilisation and pulmonary function test results are depicted in Table 1 (categorical variables) and Table 2 (ordinal and continuous variables).

Table 1 Rates of categorical symptoms, comorbidities and healthcare utilisation
Table 2 Rates of ordinal and continuous symptoms, healthcare utilisation and pulmonary function test results

All dynamic CT chest scans were performed as part of a high-resolution CT chest protocol with a focus on lung parenchymal disorders as opposed to central airway collapsibility. Overall 20 scans (34%) were judged to be good quality (morphology of mid-trachea consistent with adequate expiratory effort and an optimal number of slices available on expiratory phase).

EDAC was not found in any patient. The median degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse (quantified by mean percentage reduction in airway CSA on expiration across all five sites in each patient) was 18% (IQR: 9–30% | range 0–63%).

The majority of PSGs (88%) were level 2 studies. Although level 1 studies provide higher quality data for the assessment of sleep-disordered breathing compared with level 2 studies, linear regression with logarithmic transformation did not demonstrate any statistically significant association between AHI and level of PSG (P = 0.51). Median AHI was 13 events/hour (IQR: 5–31 events/hour | range 0–153 events/hour) and a total of 16 patients (27%) had severe OSA when defined as an AHI of ≥30 events/hour. Median supine AHI was 24 events/hour (IQR: 8–70 events/hour). Median RDI was 14 events/hour (IQR: 6–33 events/hour). Median ODI was 16 events/hour (IQR: 6–29 events/hour). Median average SpO2 in supine sleep was 92% (IQR: 88–94%).

Unadjusted and adjusted linear regression analyses demonstrated statistically significant associations between degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and multiple OSA indices including overall AHI, RDI, ODI and average SpO2 in supine and non-supine sleep (Tables 3 and 4). BMI and gender were consistently identified as relevant confounders for inclusion in the adjusted multivariate linear regression models; increased BMI and male gender were associated with increased dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse. The Pearson correlation coefficient for the unadjusted linear model associating composite mean percentage dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and overall AHI was 0.419 (p = 0.0010), representing a statistically significant moderately strong association (Fig. 1). In the adjusted model, every 10% worsening in dynamic airway collapse was associated with an increase in AHI of 5 events/hour (95% confidence interval: 0.9–10 events/hour | P = 0.019).

Table 3 Unadjusted linear regression models assessing associations between intra-thoracic central airway collapse and obstructive sleep apnoea
Table 4 Adjusted linear regression models assessing associations between intra-thoracic central airway collapse and obstructive sleep apnoea
Fig. 1
figure 1

Scatterplot demonstrating the association between dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and overall apnoea-hypopnoea index. Legend: Composite mean percentage dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse is on the X axis and overall apnoea-hypopnoea index is on the Y axis, with the unadjusted linear model depicted by the solid black line (Pearson correlation coefficient 0.419 and with p = 0.0010)

No association was demonstrated between degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and symptoms or healthcare utilisation.

Discussion

Some expiratory narrowing of central airways is physiological. The equal pressure point (EPP) theory is key. Alveolar pressure, the driving pressure for gas movement on expiration, is comprised of elastic recoil pressure plus pleural pressure. Alveolar pressure (‘intraluminal’ pressure outside alveoli) decreases on movement up the tracheobronchial tree because pressure is required to force gas across airway resistance; this is supported by the Bernoulli principle, which operates due to the decreasing total CSA of airways from periphery to mouth, and which states the perpendicular pressure exerted by a gas decreases as its velocity through a tube increases. Intraluminal pressure also decreases as expiration progresses because elastic recoil falls, and airway resistance increases, as lung volume reduces.

There is a dynamic point along the tracheobronchial tree where the intraluminal pressure falls to become equal to the external pleural pressure (the EPP). The airway is prone to collapse downstream (closer to mouth) of the EPP because pleural pressure can exceed intraluminal pressure. The system functions as a Starling resistor so airway collapse downstream of the EPP does not contribute to airway resistance (West & Luks, 2016). The EPP usually exists in lobar to subsegmental bronchi and from here to the mouth there is minimal reduction in intraluminal pressure and minimal resistance. EDAC does not reduce expiratory airflow (Kolakowski et al., 2018; Macklem et al., 1965; Macklem & Wilson, 1965; Smaldone & Smith, 1985; Loring et al., 2007; Boiselle et al., 2012; Sverzellati et al., 2009).

EDAC may arise from diseases that drive the EPP closer to the alveolus plus, separately, increased collapsibility of the pars membranosa. Diseases with increased airway resistance (asthma and chronic bronchitis) will precipitate a more rapid fall in intraluminal pressure and thus drive the EPP further upstream. Loss of elastic recoil (emphysema) does the same by reducing driving pressure for gas movement and, separately, diminishing tractional forces that promote airway patency. Obesity increases pleural pressure and forces the individual to respire at reduced lung volumes where elastic recoil is lower and airway resistance is higher (Behazin et al., 1985). Conversely there are limited data to identify which diseases promote increased intrinsic collapsibility of the pars membranosa. These could include obesity (increased extra-luminal pressure and mediastinal fat), chronic cough (repetitive tension, micro-trauma and reduced elasticity), OSA (repetitive tension from inspiratory efforts against occluded upper airway) and chronic airway inflammation (reduced elasticity) from any cause be it intrinsic or extrinsic (Kolakowski et al., 2018; Good et al., 2018). Indeed Majid et al. found 45% of 139 patients with ECAC had GORD (Majid et al., 2019).

Defining a ‘pathological’ threshold for distinguishing normal dynamic central airway narrowing from EDAC is problematic. Historically a 50% reduction in airway CSA was set. Subsequent studies with spirometry-controlled dynamic CT scans with physiologist coaching have demonstrated healthy controls have approximately 50–60% reduction in CSA with a 20% standard deviation (Boiselle et al., 2009; O’Donnell et al., 2012; Litmanovich et al., 2010; Boiselle et al., 2012). Thus 75% collapse may be a superior threshold for defining EDAC, provided imaging is performed with the same robust methods. However such scans are not readily available in most institutions and, furthermore, it is critical to appreciate that this definition of EDAC arises from limited assessments of healthy volunteers and has not been rigorously examined in symptomatic patients or in those with underlying lung disease (Murg & Colt, 2013; Kolakowski et al., 2018). Differential thresholds of ‘pathological’ central airway collapse may be applicable in different patient groups. Investigation of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse as a continuous rather than a categorical variable may help to address these issues.

Other methods of assessment of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway behaviour have limitations that likely outweigh those associated with dynamic CT imaging. Bronchoscopy allows direct real-time visualisation of the intra-thoracic central airways however precise measurement of airway collapse is hampered by (a) parallax error and other technical factors that can impede CSA calculation, (b) effects of sedation which may alter airway behaviour when compared with wakefulness, (c) continuous positive pressure transmitted to the central airways if nasal high-flow oxygen is utilised, thereby falsely reducing any dynamic collapse, (d) inability to inspect all airway locations simultaneously and (e) increased cost and risk. Although other methods such as drug-induced sleep endoscopy and magnetic resonance imaging have value in examining upper airway function in OSA, they have not been rigorously assessed in dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse (Ciscar et al., 2001; Moon et al., 2010; Cavaliere et al., 2013; Kim et al., 2014; Certal et al., 2016; Feng et al., 2018).

A disease should have attributable symptoms or sequalae and here, as outlined previously, EDAC remains particularly poorly characterised. Boiselle and colleagues examined degree of dynamic central airway collapse in 100 patients with COPD and found only weak correlation with symptoms (Boiselle et al., 2012). Good et al. found 76% of 42 patients with chronic cough had ≥65% dynamic central airway collapse, providing indirect support for the common belief that central airway collapse contributes to cough while also revealing the potential pitfalls of fixating on ≥75% reduction in CSA as the only clinically relevant threshold for pathological dynamic central airway collapse (Good et al., 2018). No studies have thoroughly investigated associations between degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and respiratory complications or mortality.

Existing evidence for an association between EDAC and OSA is mixed. Ehtisham et al. reported a retrospective case series in which 62% of 107 patients with ECAC had OSA, but neither degree of airway collapse required for EDAC diagnosis nor OSA severity were specified (Ehtisham et al., 2015). Good et al. found OSA (defined as AHI of ≥5 events/hour) in 78% of 32 patients with both chronic cough and ≥ 65% dynamic change in central airway CSA, being their threshold for significant collapse (Good et al., 2018). Kolakowski and colleagues audited 200 patients who had undergone investigations for both EDAC (defined as ≥75% collapse) and OSA (Kolakowski et al., 2018). Patients were subdivided into those with and without OSA (defined as AHI of ≥5 events/hour). Prevalence of EDAC across both groups was approximately 25% but severe EDAC (arbitrarily defined in their study as ≥85% collapse) occurred significantly more often in patients with OSA (15% versus 6%). Degree of dynamic tracheal collapse was also assessed as a continuous variable, being maximal percentage CSA reduction at any location in the trachea, and this was weakly correlated with supine but not overall AHI. Although the work by Kolakowski et al. is valuable in this developing area, their analysis also exemplifies the limitations that can arise from a categorical statistical methodology; in their research this was applied not only to the degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse but also OSA, which is another complex and inherently continuous pathophysiological phenomenon.

Our study adds significantly to the existing literature because it is the first to demonstrate statistically robust associations between degree of dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and multiple OSA indices reflecting both respiratory event-related sleep fragmentation and hypoxic burden. An important strength of our study is the introduction of a multi-site continuous composite index of airway collapse rather than the sole use of the arbitrary categorical presence of ‘EDAC’ at any one site, thereby more accurately reflecting complex central airway behaviour; this novel approach permitted our analysis to elucidate, for the first time, the fractional impact of increasing dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse on upper airway collapsibility in sleep. This is also the first study to utilise regression models to adjust for confounders, which is important when diseases may share risk factors.

We stress that we do not claim to have proven an association between EDAC, as defined as a ≥ 75% reduction in airway CSA, and OSA; rather, our data support the theory that increasing dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse is associated with increasingly severe obstructive sleep apnoea, as measured by obstructive respiratory events and hypoxic burden. Failure to identify EDAC in our study was likely because the dynamic CT chest scans were all performed as part of high-resolution protocols with a focus on lung parenchyma rather than airway collapse, meaning there was none of the spirometry-control or physiologist coaching used in the research protocols that identified ≥75% collapse as abnormal in healthy volunteers. This methodological flaw was unavoidable in a retrospective study and explains why only 34% of scans were graded as good quality for our purposes (evidence of adequate expiratory effort and optimal number of slices on expiratory phase). However, if anything, any bias arising from this weakness would have reduced the probability of finding a relationship between dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and OSA. Future prospective research with dedicated high-quality dynamic CT imaging is required to further explore the potential association.

Analysis of any association between airway collapse and symptoms / healthcare utilisation would have been confounded by the inclusion of dynamic CT chest scans for any indication, meaning all patients must have had some respiratory symptom to prompt investigation.

Conclusions

This study provides compelling evidence for a relationship between dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse and OSA especially because, even after adjusting for confounders, multiple OSA indices continued to demonstrate statistically and clinically significant associations with degree of collapse. We feel that these findings should prompt clinicians to consider EDAC in patients with severe OSA and vice versa. The shared phenotype may be the obese middle-aged patient with underlying airways disease and chronic cough, although further work is clearly required to test these commonly held clinical beliefs. Continuous positive airway pressure offers the potential to improve both conditions while mucus retention due to EDAC may benefit from positive expiratory pressure techniques for sputum clearance (Murgu & Colt, 2007; Dedhia et al., 2015; Adliff et al., 1997; Sirithangkul et al., 2010).

Future research could seek to prospectively confirm the association and test its extension to EDAC, clarify any association between airway collapse and symptoms / healthcare utilisation, assess whether differing thresholds of ‘pathological’ airway collapse may be applicable in different patient populations, and determine if physiological tests like impulse oscillometry can identify EDAC with or without OSA (Fielding et al., 2018).

Availability of data and materials

All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article.

Abbreviations

AHI:

Apnoea-hypopnoea index

COPD:

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

CPAP:

Continuous positive airway pressure

CSA:

Cross-sectional area

CT:

Computed tomography

ECAC:

Excessive central airway collapse

EDAC:

Excessive dynamic airway collapse

EPP:

Equal pressure point

FEV1:

Forced expiratory volume in 1 second

FVC:

Forced vital capacity

GORD:

Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease

IQR:

Inter-quartile range

ODI:

Oxygen 3% desaturation index

OSA:

Obstructive sleep apnoea

RDI:

Respiratory disturbance index

REM:

Rapid eye movement

SpO2:

Peripheral oxygen saturation

References

  • Adliff M, Ngato D, Keshavjee S, et al. Treatment of diffuse tracheomalacia secondary to relapsing polychronditis with continuous positive airway pressure. Chest. 1997;112(6):1701–4.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Behazin N, Jones S, Cohen R, et al. Respiratory restriction and elevated pleural and esophageal pressures in morbid obesity. J Appl Physiol. 1985;108(1):212–8.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Boiselle P, Michaud G, Roberts D, et al. Dynamic expiratory tracheal collapse in COPD: correlation with clinical and physiologic parameters. Chest. 2012;142(6):1539–44.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Boiselle P, O’Donnell C, Bankier A, et al. Tracheal collapsibility in healthy volunteers during forced expiration: assessment with multi-detector CT. Radiology. 2009;252(1):255–62.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cavaliere M, Russo F, Iemma M, et al. Awake versus drug-induced sleep endoscopy: evaluation of airway obstruction in obstructive sleep apnea / hypopnoea syndrome. Laryngoscope. 2013;123(9):2315–8.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Certal V, Pratas R, Guimaraes L, et al. Awake examination versus DISE for surgical decision making in patients with OSA: a systematic review. Laryngoscope. 2016;126(3):768–74.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ciscar M, Juan G, Martinez V, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging of the pharynx in OSA patients and healthy subjects. Eur Respir J. 2001;17(1):79–86.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Dedhia R, Kapur V, Weaver E. Excessive dynamic airway collapse of the lower airway: a cause for persistent sleep-disordered breathing after tracheostomy. J Clin Sleep Med. 2015;11(11):1337–9.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ehtisham M, Azhar-Munir R, Klopper E, et al. Correlation between tracheobronchomalacia / hyper dynamic airway collapse and obstructive sleep apnoea. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2015;191:A3075.

    Google Scholar 

  • Feng Y, Keenan B, Wang S, et al. Dynamic upper airway imaging during wakefulness in obese subjects with and without sleep apnea. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2018;198(11):1435–43.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Fielding D, Travers J, Nguyen P, et al. Expiratory reactance abnormalities in patients with expiratory dynamic airway collapse: a new application of impulse oscillometry. ERJ Open Res. 2018;4(4):00080–2018. https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00080-2018.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  • Good J, Rollins D, Kolakowski C, et al. New insights in the diagnosis of chronic refractory cough. Respir Med. 2018;141:103–10.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kim A, Keenan B, Jackson N, et al. Tongue fat and its relationship to obstructive sleep apnea. Sleep. 2014;37(10):1639–48.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kolakowski C, Rollins D, Jennermann T, et al. Clarifying the link between sleep disordered breathing and tracheal collapse: a retrospective analysis. Sleep Sci Pract. 2018;2:10. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41606-018-0030-2.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Litmanovich D, O’Donnell C, Bankier A. Bronchial collapsibility at forced expiration in healthy volunteers: assessment with multidetector CT. Radiology. 2010;257(2):560–7.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Loring S, O’Donnell C, Feller-Kopman D, et al. Central airway mechanics and flow limitation in acquired tracheobronchomalacia. Chest. 2007;131(4):1118–24.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Macklem P, Fraser R, Brown W. The detection of the flow-limiting bronchi in bronchitis and emphysema by airway pressure measurements. Med Thorac. 1965;22:220–30.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Macklem P, Wilson N. Measurement of intrabronchial pressure in man. J Appl Physiol. 1965;20(4):653–63.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Majid A, Kheir F, Alape D, et al. The prevalence of gastroeosophageal reflux in patients with excessive central airway collapse. Chest. 2019;155(3):540–5.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Matus I, Richter W, Mani S. Awareness, competencies, and practice patterns in tracheobronchomalacia: a survey of pulmonologists. J Bronchology Interv Pulmonol. 2016;23(2):131–7.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moon I, Han D, Kim J, et al. Sleep magnetic resonance imaging as a new diagnostic method in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Laryngoscope. 2010;120(12):2546–54.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Murg S, Colt H. Tracheobronchomalacia and excessive dynamic airway collapse. Clin Chest Med. 2013;34(3):527–55.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Murgu S, Colt H. Description of multidimensional classification system for patients with expiratory central airway collapse. Respirology. 2007;12(4):543–50.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • O’Donnell C, Litmanovich D, Loring S, et al. Age and sex dependence of forced expiratory central airway collapse in healthy volunteers. Chest. 2012;142(1):168–74.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Sirithangkul S, Ranganathan S, Robinson P, et al. Positive expiratory pressure to enhance cough effectiveness in tracheomalacia. J Med Assoc Thail. 2010;93(6):S122–8.

    Google Scholar 

  • Smaldone G, Smith P. Location of flow-limiting segments via airway catheters near residual volume in humans. J Appl Physiol. 1985;59(2):502–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Sverzellati N, Rastelli A, Chetta A. Airway malacia in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: prevalence, morphology and relationship with emphysema, bronchiectasis and bronchial wall thickening. Eur Radiol. 2009;19(7):1669–78.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • West J, Luks A. West’s respiratory physiology: the essentials. Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer; 2016.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

The authors sincerely thank Suzanne Edwards for her generous assistance with statistical design and analysis. The authors thank Dr. Mark Jurisevic and Dr. Sonya Johnston for assistance in collating polysomnography data.

Funding

No external funding was received for this study.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

Dr. Crowhurst conceptualised the study, developed the methodology, co-ordinated data collection and drafted the manuscript; he is guarantor for the paper, taking responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole from inception to submission for publication. Dr. Tcherveniakov contributed significantly to the methodology, particularly relating to imaging analysis, collected and analysed data and reviewed the manuscript. Dr. Lorraine contributed significantly to the methodology, particularly relating to imaging analysis, and reviewed the manuscript. Dr. Polasek contributed to the methodology, assisted in data access and reviewed the manuscript. A/Prof Nguyen assisted in conceptualisation of the study, contributed to the methodology and reviewed the manuscript. Dr. Yeo assisted in conceptualisation of the study, contributed to the methodology, assisted in data analysis and reviewed the manuscript. The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Thomas David Crowhurst.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

This multi-centre retrospective audit was approved by the local research ethics committee (Central Adelaide Local Health Network Research Ethics Committee approval number 137). The requirement for patient consent was waived by the ethics committee given the retrospective nature of the research involving existing clinical information and the negligible risk to patients.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no completing interests.

Additional information

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Crowhurst, T.D., Tcherveniakov, P., Lorraine, B. et al. Obstructive sleep apnoea is associated with dynamic intra-thoracic central airway collapse: results of a 10-year multi-centre retrospective analysis. Sleep Science Practice 4, 8 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41606-020-00045-z

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s41606-020-00045-z

Keywords