Abstract
Objective
Various anatomical structures of upper airway and physical differences are known to be risk factors for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Torus mandibularis is a structure that can appear on the inside of the mandible. Therefore, it is possible for tori to influence airway volume by occupying the space for tongue, and cause sleep apnea. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of torus mandibularis on the severity of OSA as one of the craniofacial risk factors.
Design
Retrospective case‐control study.
Setting
University‐based tertiary medical center.
Participants
Adult patients over 19‐years‐old who visited out‐patient clinics with complaints of sleep‐disordered breathing symptoms between January 2010 and December 2017 were investigated.
Main outcome measures
The presence of torus mandibularis in oral cavity was confirmed by physical examination or CT image. We analyzed demographic findings including age, sex, medical history, previous operation history, physical findings of upper airway, and result of polysomnography. To evaluate the effect of torus mandibularis on OSA, polysomnography data of the two groups according to presence or absence of torus mandibularis were compared and analyzed.
Results
232 OSA patients with BMI less than 25 were divided into two groups, according to either the presence or absence of torus mandibularis. We analyzed 138 patients of control group and 94 of torus mandibularis group. AHI was 18.8 ± 14.9 in control group and 25.1 ± 18.4 in torus mandibularis group (p=0.006). RDI was 23.1 ± 14.7 in control group and 27.9 ± 18.4 in torus mandibularis group (p=0.035). Supine AHI showed 26.6 ± 20.3 in control group and 32.5 ± 22.6 in torus mandibularis group (p=0.039). Patients with torus mandibularis had a trend of increase in proportion according to the severity of sleep apnea, such as AHI (p=0.007) or RDI (p=0.034).
Conclusions
We newly found that the presence of torus mandibularis affects not only severity of OSA and also position dependent OSA. These results support the necessity of torus mandibularis evaluation in OSA patients, and further study is also required to investigate its consequence in the surgical outcome.
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