Date: February 2023.
Source: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine;19(2):275–282.
Objective: To determine baseline facial convexity measurements in children with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) across the age spectrum.
Methods: Polysomnogram, stereophotogrammetry, and biometric data were collected from children aged 0–18 years who were being investigated for OSA. Analyses evaluated differences in facial convexity according to OSA severity and other sleep parameters, while adjusting for age, ethnicity, and sex.
Results: Ninety-one children, aged 0.05–16.02 years, met the inclusion criteria for this study. Initial analysis showed that the logarithm of age had a significant effect on facial convexity (P = 8.3·10−7) with significant effects of sex (P = 1.3·10−2), while excluding OSA. Ordinal logistic regression taking into consideration age, sex, weight, height, and ethnicity with OSA severity categorized as obstructive apnea-hypopnea index negative, mild, moderate, or severe showed that facial convexity was associated with OSA severity (P = 2.2·10−3); an increasing obtuse angle of convexity increased the tendency to be classified as having severe OSA.
Conclusions: Using three-dimensional imaging, we found an added impact of infancy on changes of facial convexity with age. While modeling could describe facial convexity without any OSA-associated sleep parameters, differences in facial convexity were present among groups with different levels of OSA severity adjusted for growth (age, weight, and height), sex, and ethnicity. The method provides a safer and cheaper alternative to other medical imaging techniques in children and holds potential for future use in studies of craniofacial structure.
Article: Three-dimensional orthodontic imaging in children across the age spectrum and correlations with obstructive sleep apnea.
Authors: G Tyler, R Machaalani, KA Waters,