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Daytime Functioning in Obstructive Sleep Apnea Patients: Exercise Tolerance, Subjective Fatigue, and Sleepiness
Authors:Robert Neal Aguillard  Brant W. Riedel  Kenneth L. Lichstein  Frederick G. Grieve  Christopher T. Johnson  Sharon L. Noe
Affiliation:(1) Sleep Disorders Center, Methodist Healthcare of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee;(2) Department of Psychology, The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee;(3) Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, Tennessee
Abstract:A sample of 32 obstructive sleep apnea patients (27 males, 5 females) was assessed with overnight polysomnography and the Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT), an objective measure of daytime sleepiness. Patients also participated in a maximal exercise test, which served as an objective indicator of physical fatigue. The Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) was used as a subjective measure of fatigue. Subjective fatigue ratings were significantly correlated with percent of predicted maximum heart rate achieved during exercise testing, suggesting that self-reported fatigue in apnea patients may refer to reduced physical fitness. FSS scores and exercise testing results were not significantly correlated with the MSLT, indicating that daytime fatigue and daytime sleepiness are independent problems in apnea patients. Participants self-reported a high level of fatigue, and exercise testing revealed decreased physical work capacity among apnea patients, but objective and subjective indicators of fatigue were not significantly correlated with apnea severity. A higher percentage of REM sleep predicted greater work capacity.
Keywords:obstructive sleep apnea  fatigue  exercise tolerance  work capacity  sleepiness  Multiple Sleep Latency Test
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