Sleep-Disordered Breathing Among Women With Fibromyalgia Syndrome, 2006, Shah et al

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Sleep-Disordered Breathing Among Women With Fibromyalgia Syndrome

Shah, Mansi A.; Feinberg, Stanford; Krishnan, Eswar

Background
In clinical practice, polysomnograms (“sleep studies”) are seldom ordered for patients with fibromyalgia, although sleep issues dominate the symptom complex. One reason for this is the lack of understanding how information from these studies could aid clinical decisions.

Methods
The authors conducted a chart review of one rheumatologist’s community-based practice where polysomnograms were offered routinely to all women who met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for fibromyalgia. Interpretation of these standardized protocol-based polysomnograms was performed by a board-certified neurologist using standard criteria.

Results
Mean age of the study subjects (n = 23) was 45 (standard deviation, 7.8) years. Median body mass index was 27 kg/m2 (interquartile range 20–48). These women had poor sleep with many arousals (median arousal index 23), apnea–hypopneas (median apnea–hypopnea index 22, interquartile range 17–30). Desaturation was common with half the patients having nadir oxygen saturation less than 87%. Restless legs were detected in polysomnograms among many women who clinically denied it (mean leg movement index 5.8).

Conclusions
A large proportion of women with fibromyalgia in a general rheumatology practice had sleep-disordered breathing, which can be detected using sleep polysomnograms. Studies are needed to examine if treatment of the commonly detected sleep apnea will have a beneficial effect on symptoms of fibromyalgia.

Web | DOI | JCR: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology | Paywall
 
I thought it'd be worth looking at this study, noted by @nataliezzz in another thread as showing a very high prevalence of sleep disorders in fibromyalgia:
e.g. in the below study - arguably a pretty representative sample - consecutive female fibromyalgia patients in a rheumatology clinic (all meeting ACR fibro criteria) were offered PSG; 40% (23) underwent PSG. 19/23 (83%) had an AHI >15; unspecified how many had milder OSA but it looks like 100% had OSA based on the graph), mean apnea index was 0.83 and mean hypopnea index was 30.6.
 
nataliezzz said:
arguably a pretty representative sample - consecutive female fibromyalgia patients
"Consecutive" is useful when all of the consecutive patients participate. If less than half of the patients participate based on voluntarily choosing to do a sleep study, then it's not representative, and is probably skewed to people with sleep issues.
Paper said:
All cases of FMS identified in a community-based single-specialty rheumatology office during the period 2003 through 2004 were eligible to be included in this study. These patients fulfilled the criteria for FMS proposed by the ACR.2 Formal polysomnography was offered to all patients with FMS and 40% (n 24) of those patients agreed to undergo polysomnography.
 
Though even if the study is not representative, it does seem to show that at least around 40% of fibromyalgia patients at a rheumatology clinic have sleep apnea. And since at least some of the 60% who didn't participate likely also have sleep apnea, the prevalence is probably higher than that.

So it does seem like a high prevalence of sleep apnea in fibromyalgia.
 
The full article is paywalled so I am not sure whether the results in Fibromyalgia were contrasted with a control sample or population norms. It would be interesting to know what levels to expect in different populations with other long term disabilities.
 
The full article is paywalled so I am not sure whether the results in Fibromyalgia were contrasted with a control sample or population norms. It would be interesting to know what levels to expect in different populations with other long term disabilities.
There's no control group, but they say other studies have shown a prevalence of 4%.
Our study did not have a control group (patients without FMS). However, previous studies have shown nearly 4% prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing in randomly selected females. 22,23 Much higher prevalence of SA (83%) in our population of females with FMS indicates a likely association between these 2 conditions.
22. Young T, Palta M, Dempsey J, et al. The occurrence of sleep-disordered breathing among middle-aged adults. N Engl J Med. 1993;328:1230–1235. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199304293281704
23. Boissevain MD, McCain GA. Toward an integrated understanding of fibromyalgia syndrome. I. Medical and pathophysiological aspects. Pain. 1991;45:227–238. https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(91)90047-2

I'm not sure why the second paper is cited, from the abstract, but the first one seems to be be studying a sample intentionally chosen to have higher than average rates of sleep disorders, which I think means the 4% might be an over-estimate.
This investigation was based on a random sample of state employees in Wisconsin. A two-stage sampling scheme, designed to optimize the study's precision by oversampling subjects more likely to have sleep-disordered breathing, was used to construct a cohort representing a wide range of sleep-disordered breathing.

Note: l'm not sure from a quick skim what the 4% is based on. It seems that the prevalence in women was either 2% or 9%, depending on definition:
The estimated prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing, defined as an apnea-hypopnea score of 5 or higher, was 9 percent for women and 24 percent for men. We estimated that 2 percent of women and 4 percent of men in the middle-aged work force meet the minimal diagnostic criteria for the sleep apnea syndrome (an apnea-hypopnea score of 5 or higher and daytime hypersomnolence).
 
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