Sleep medicine
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Excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) is a major consequence of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) in adults. In snoring children, spontaneous and respiratory arousals display reciprocal interactions, allowing for development of a new quantitative measure, the sleep pressure score (SPS), which provides intra-polysomnographic estimates of sleep pressure/disruption. The aim of the present study was to assess the interactions between respiratory and spontaneous arousals in adults with suspected SDB, and to examine whether the SPS and the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS) are correlated. ⋯ As in children, snoring adults exhibit reciprocal interactions between respiratory and spontaneous arousals that can also be expressed as a single quantitative measure, the SPS, which is highly dependent on the severity of SDB and could possibly serve as a more reliable index of sleep disruption, considering that the ESS is unrelated to either SPS or AHI.