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- Anna Lo Bue, Adriana Salvaggio, and Giuseppe Insalaco.
- National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Biomedical Research and Innovation, Via Ugo La Malfa, 153, 90146, Palermo, Italy. anna.lobue@irib.cnr.it.
- Eur. J. Pediatr. 2020 Mar 1; 179 (3): 357-365.
AbstractSleep is a physiological function that undergoes, at different stages of life, to considerable variations in neurophysiological and behavioral functions. The developmental age is a period characterized by a continuous process of physical and neuropsychological changes and synaptic remodeling processes that are the neurophysiological basis of brain plasticity, typical of this developmental phase, occurring mainly during sleep. In the description of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children, two main points should be highlighted: its variability in different age groups, and its specificity compared with OSA in adults. The definition and criteria used for the diagnosis of OSA in adults are not applicable to OSA in developmental age. Although the adenotonsillar hypertrophy is the most common risk factor for pediatric OSA, obesity is becoming an increasingly prevalent risk factor, mostly in early childhood (6-9 years) and adolescence. OSA has been shown to affect cognitive function in children and adults. However, OSA impact on cognitive function in children is more severe since acting on the plastic brain structures can change the neuro-psychic development, learning skills, and social interactions. There is a clear difference in the definition of pathology between developmental age and adulthood according to the instrumental parameters: an AHI ≥ 5, which represents, in the pediatric age, the cut-off for a therapeutic pathway necessary to avoid a long-term effect on the child, instead, it represents in adulthood, the lower limit value for the definition of disease. This is a narrative review concerning obstructive sleep apnea in developmental age.Conclusions: OSA is a common disorder in children and those at risk must be identified, studied, and treated promptly because untreated OSA can be responsible for cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurocognitive morbidities and may induce, sometimes, non-reversible deficits given his insistence on a period of physical and neuro-psychic development.What is Known:•This is a review concerning Obstructive Sleep Apnea in developmental age•Clinical manifestation, diagnostic and therapeutic criteria of sleep apnea in developmental ageWhat is New:•This is a "narrative" review•This narrative review describes sleep apnea comparing and analyzing the different ages of life.
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