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Head and Neck Imaging |
1 Department of Respiratory Medicine (J.L.D.P., D.V., P.M., P.A.L.)
2 Sleep Laboratory (J.L.D.P., P.M., P.A.L.)
3 Department of Radiology (G.R.F.), Centre Hôpitalier Universitaire de Grenoble, BP 217 X, F-38043 Grenoble 9, France
4 Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Preta Laboratoty, Joseph Fourier University, Grenoble, France (P.A.L.).
PURPOSE: To determine whether a hooked appearance of the soft palate can be seen in awake patients with snoring with or without obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) on cephalometric radiographs and computed tomographic (CT) scans.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: One hundred thirty-one patients with snoring underwent cephalometric radiography, with which the posterior airway space, soft palate length and width, and distance between the hyoid bone and mandibular plane were measured, and/or pharyngeal CT, with which the luminal areas of the airway at the naso-, oro-, and hypopharyngeal levels were measured.
RESULTS: Of the 131 patients, 96 had OSAS, and 35 had snoring. Nine of 96 patients with OSAS had soft palate hooking on awake pharyngeal CT or cephalometric images. No patient with snoring alone had hooking. Patients with hooking had a larger posterior airway space than did patients with OSAS without hooking (P = .05), and an enlarged (
15-mm) posterior airway space was more frequent in patients with hooking (eight of nine patients) than in those without hooking (34 of 87) (P < .01). Oropharyngeal and hypopharyngeal areas were significantly larger in patients with hooking than in patients without hooking or in patients with snoring (P
.04).
CONCLUSION: Cephalometric radiography and CT can demonstrate hooking of the soft palate in awake patients. This finding indicates a high risk for OSAS.
Index terms: Pharynx, abnormalities, 26.1492, 26.91 Pharynx, CT, 26.12111 Pharynx, stenosis or obstruction, 26.1492 Sleep apnea, 26.827
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