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©2012 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Diabetes. Apr 15, 2012; 3(4): 65-70
Published online Apr 15, 2012. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v3.i4.65
Published online Apr 15, 2012. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v3.i4.65
Study | Study design/ cohort | Sample size | Control group | Outcome/ measurements | Study duration | Conclusions | +/- |
Stoohs et al[29] | OSA patients | 5 | None | Fasting glucose and insulin | 2 mo | No change in either fasting or nocturnal insulin level | _ |
Increase in nocturnal and fasting glucose | |||||||
Saini et al[30] | OSA patients BMI 32.7 ± 2.3 Kg/m2 | 8 | None | Glucose and insulin every 10 min interval during sleep | 1 night | Mean insulin and glucose did not differ between pre treatment and treatment night | - |
Davies et al[31] | OSA patients | 10 | Matched control | Fasting insulin, lipid profile | 3 mo | No change in insulin level with CPAP | - |
Brooks et al[32] | OSA patients with BMI 42.7 ± 4.3 kg/m2 | 10 | None | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | 4 mo | Improvement in insulin responsiveness seen | + |
Cooper et al[33] | OSA patients | 6 | None | Insulin and c-peptide sample every hour and glucose sample every 30 min during sleep | 1 night | No changes in glucose, insulin and C-peptide with CPAP treatment | - |
Saarelainen et al[34] | OSA patients | 7 | None | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | 3 mo | No change in insulin responsiveness | _ |
Pierzchala et al[35] (article in Polish) | Type 1 and type 2 diabetes patients with OSA | 30 | None | Blood glucose | 6 mo | Better blood glucose control | + |
Chin et al[36] | OSA patients | 22 | OSA patients | Oral glucose tolerance test with insulin measurement | 6 mo | No change in glucose and insulin level except in patients who have lost weight | _ |
Ip et al[37] | OSA patients | 30 | Matched 30 non-OSA control | Fasting glucose and insulin | 6 mo | No change in fasting glucose and insulin seen (decrease in Leptin and triglyceride was seen) | _ |
Smurra et al[38] | 16 OSA patients; 10 from endocrine clinic and 6 other OSA patients | 16 | None | Oral glucose tolerance test in 10 patients and hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp in 6 patients | 2 mo | No change in mean glycemia, insulin level or insulin responsiveness was seen | _ |
Harsch et al[39] | OSA patients | 40 | None | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | 3 mo | Improvement in insulin sensitivity at day 2 and 3 mo, in patient with BMI < 30, than in patients with BMI > 30 | + |
Harsch et al[40] | Type 2 diabetes patients with OSA | 9 | None | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | 3 mo | Insulin sensitivity was unchanged after 2 days, but significantly improved after 3 mo; glycemic control was unaffected after 3 mo | +/- |
Babu et al[41] | Type 2 diabetes patients with OSA | 25 | None | HBA1c and post prandial blood glucose | 3 mo | Decrease in HBA1c and postprandial am glucose level | + |
Czupryniak et al[42] | Non diabetic OSA patients | 9 | None | Continuous glucose monitoring, plasma insulin, HOMA-IR | 1 night | Mean blood glucose, fasting insulin and HOMA-IR were significantly higher with CPAP treatment | - |
Hassaballa et al[43] | Type 2 diabetes and OSA (retrospective) | 38 | None | HBA1c | Approx. 3 mo | Decrease in HBA1c was seen with CPAP therapy | + |
Lindberg et al[44] | OSA patients | 28 | Matched control without OSA | HOMA and fasting insulin | 6 mo | Decrease in insulin resistance and fasting insulin | + |
West et al[45] | Type 2 diabetes and OSA | 42 | Randomized, double blind | HOMA, hyperinsulinaemic euglycemic clamp, HBA1c, highly sensitive C-reactive protein | 3 mo | No change in glycemic control or insulin resistance | _ |
Coughlin et al[46] | OSA patients | 34 | Randomized placebo-controlled blinded crossover trial | Insulin, fasting glucose, HOMA-IR | 6 wk | No change in glucose or insulin resistance | _ |
Pallayova et al[47] | Type 2 diabetes with OSA | 14 | None | Continuous glucose monitoring | Several d | Reduction in nocturnal glucose variability and improved overnight glucose control | + |
Wang et al[48] | Type 2 diabetes and OSA | 30 | None | HOMA | 7 d | Improve ISI | + |
Dawson et al[49] | Type 2 diabetes with OSA | 20 | None | Continuous glucose monitoring | Average 41 d (26-96 d) | Decrease in sleeping blood glucose seen | + |
Steiropoulos et al[50] | Diabetes with OSA | 56 | None | HBA1c, fasting glucose, insulin level, HOMA-IR | 6 mo | Only patients with CPAP use > 4 h/night showed decrease in HBA1c | +/- |
Wei et al[51] | OSA patients | 11 | None | Fasting blood glucose, plasma insulin, HOMA-IR | 4 d | Decrease in blood glucose and increase in insulin sensitivity seen | + |
Oktay et al[52] | OSA and metabolic syndrome | 20 | None | Fasting blood glucose | 1 yr | No difference in blood glucose seen | _ |
Lam et al[53] | OSA patients | 61 (30 control and 31 study group) | Sham CPAP | Short insulin tolerance test | 12 wk | Improvement in insulin sensitivity seen only in subjects with BMI ≥ 25 | +/- |
Garcia et al[54] | Obese OSA patients | 20 | None | OGTT, insulin level, Gherlin, adiponectin, leptin | 6 mo | Increase insulin and IR; gherlin decrease, whereas leptin and adiponectin remains unchanged | - |
Shpirer et al[55] | OSA patients | 30 | None | HBA1c | 3-5 mo | Decrease in HBA1c in severe OSA patients | + |
- Citation: Surani S, Subramanian S. Effect of continuous positive airway pressure therapy on glucose control. World J Diabetes 2012; 3(4): 65-70
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9358/full/v3/i4/65.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4239/wjd.v3.i4.65