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JCSM - Article Abstract

Volume : 05
Issue : 06
Pages : 554-561



SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
Polysomnographic Findings are Associated with Cephalometric Measurements in Mouth-Breathing Children

Maria Ligia Juliano, D.D.S., Ph.D.1; Marco Antonio Cardoso Machado, D.D.S., Ph.D.1; Luciane Bizari Coin de Carvalho, Ph.D.1; Edilson Zancanella, M.D.1; Gianni Mara Silva Santos2; Lucila Bizari Fernandes do Prado, M.D., Ph.D.1; Gilmar Fernandes do Prado, M.D., Ph.D.3

1Neuro-Sono section, Department of Neurology, and 2Department of Medicine, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil; 3Neuro-Sono Section, Hospital São Paulo Sleep Laboratory, Department of Neurology, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil



Objectives: Children with adenotonsillar hypertrophy and those with an abnormal craniofacial morphology are predisposed to having sleep disordered breathing; many of these children are mouth breathers. The aim of this study was to determine whether an association exists between polysomnographic findings and cephalometric measures in mouth-breathing children.
Methods: Twenty-seven children (15 mouth-breathing children and 12 nose-breathing children [control subjects]), aged 7 to 14 years, took part in the study. Polysomnographic variables included sleep efficiency, sleep latency, apnea-hypopnea index, oxygen saturation, arousal index, number of periodic limb movements in sleep, and snoring. Cephalometric measures included maxilla and mandible position, occlusal and mandibular plane inclination, incisor position, pharyngeal airway space width, and hyoid bone position.
Results: As compared with nose-breathing children, mouth breathers were more likely to snore (p < 0.001) and to have an apnea-hypopnea index greater than 1 (p = 0.02). Mouth-breathing children were also more likely to have a retruded mandible, more inclined occlusal and mandibular planes, a smaller airway space, and a smaller superior pharyngeal airway space (p < 0.01). The apnea-hypopnea index increased as the posterior airway space decreased (p = 0.05).
Conclusions: Our study showed an association between polysomnographic data and cephalometric measures in mouth-breathing children. Snoring was the most important variable associated with abnormal craniofacial morphology. Orthodontists should send any mouth-breathing child for an evaluation of sleep if they find that the child has a small superior pharyngeal airway space or an increased ANB (the relationship between the maxilla and mandible), NS.PlO (occlusal plane inclination in relationship to the skull base), or NS.GoGn (the mandibular plane inclination in relation to the skull base), indicating that the child has a steeper mandibular plane.
Keywords: Sleep disordered breathing, polysomnography, lateral radiography, mouth-breathing children