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Dysphagia severity is associated with worse sleep-disordered breathing in infants with Down syndrome.

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: Hypotonia, commonly seen in infants with Down syndrome (I-DS), can contribute to masticatory and oropharyngeal muscle weakness, increasing the risk for dysphagia and sleep-disordered breathing. Data describing the occurrence of dysphagia and sleep-disordered breathing in I-DS are limited. This study aims to determine the frequency and severity of dysphagia and its relationship to polysomnogram parameters in I-DS. METHODS: We included I-DS who underwent polysomnography at a single academic center over a 6-year period. Data collected included sex, age, presence of dysphagia (low suspicion of dysphagia vs dysphagia vs feeding tube), and polysomnographic data. Dysphagia was determined by a video fluoroscopic swallow study in the presence of clinical suspicion. RESULTS: A total of 40 I-DS were identified (mean age 6.6 months ± 3; male 65%). There were 11, 13, and 16 I-DS with low suspicion of dysphagia, dysphagia, and feeding tube, respectively. Obstructive sleep apnea was more severe in I-DS in the feeding tube group when compared with the group with a low suspicion of dysphagia and (apnea-hypopnea index mean [standard error] = 49.3 [7.6] vs 19.2 [9.2] events/h; P = .016). Dysphagia severity was positively correlated with a higher obstructive apnea-hypopnea index (r = .43, P = .006). CONCLUSIONS: There is a high incidence of dysphagia and sleep-disordered breathing in I-DS. Dysphagia severity correlated with obstructive apnea-hypopnea index severity. Our results suggest that I-DS need early evaluation of both sleep-disordered breathing and dysphagia. CITATION: Cho Y, Kwon Y, DelRosso L, Sobremonte-King M. Dysphagia severity is associated with worse sleep-disordered breathing in infants with Down syndrome. J Clin Sleep Med. 2023;19(5):883-887.

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