Background: Evidence suggests that sleep-related respiratory and related metabolic compromise may vary between females and males with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). Our purpose was to elucidate possible gender differences in sleep-associated respiratory and inflammatory parameters in patients with SDB.
Materials and methods: A consecutive number of SDB patients (46 females and 167 males) who underwent polysomnography were retrospectively reviewed. Fibrinogen and C-reactive protein (CRP) concentration, apnea index (ApnI), hypopnea index (HypI), apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), average and minimal SpO2, duration of snoring, age, and body mass index (BMI) were compared between sexes. Spearman's ρ correlation coefficients between parameters were also calculated.
Results: ApnI and AHI were significantly higher in males. Correlation analysis revealed striking gender differences: only in females, CRP concentration was highly correlated with snoring duration (r = 0.4393), BMI (r = 0.7147), minimal SpO2 (r = -0.4357), and average SpO2 (r = -0.4547); in females, HypI was more strongly correlated with AHI (r = 0.8778), average SpO2 (r = -0.5765), minimal SpO2 (r = -0.5817), and fibrinogen concentration (r = 0.4614) than in males (r = 0.4373; -0.3295; -0.2969; and 0.0887, respectively); in females, age had a much more pronounced effect on ApnI, HypI, AHI, average oxygen saturation (SaO2), minimal SaO2, snoring duration, and CRP and fibrinogen concentration.
Conclusions: Respiratory compromise in females with SDB is more strongly associated with systemic inflammation than in males with SDB. Although females display a pathological AHI less frequently than males, they reach quite similar pathological SaO2, CRP, and fibrinogen values. Therefore, AHI may underestimate the pathophysiological systemic effects of SDB in females.
Keywords: C-reactive protein; fibrinogen; gender; obstructive sleep apnea; snoring.