Chronic nasal obstruction causes daytime sleepiness and decreased quality of life even in the absence of snoring

Author: Udaka Tsuyoshi   Suzuki Hideaki   Fujimura Takeyuki   Hiraki Nobuaki   Ohkubo Junichi   Shiomori Teruo   Ueda Narihisa   Hashida Koichi   Mori Takanori   Fujino Yoshihisa  

Publisher: OceanSide Publications, Inc

ISSN: 1539-6290

Source: American Journal of Rhinology, Vol.21, Iss.5, 2007-09, pp. : 564-569

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Abstract

Background: There has been a growing awareness that nasal obstruction may impair various daily and social activities. We performed a questionnaire survey in a working population to clarify the contribution made by snoring concomitant with nasal obstruction to daytime sleepiness and quality of life (QOL).Methods: Seven thousand nine hundred eighty daytime workers were asked to complete questionnaires, 7702 responded, and the data from 3442 subjects were finally analyzed. Nasal obstruction and snoring were graded into three and four categories, respectively. Daytime sleepiness and QOL were assessed by the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey, respectively.Results: Subjects with chronic nasal obstruction, even if snoring was absent, reported significantly higher ESS scores and lower QOL scores than control subjects, and the presence of habitual snoring had an additive influence on these changes. The ESS and mental QOL scores adjusted for age, sex, and body mass index showed the same tendency.Conclusion: Induction of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is a possible cause of excessive daytime sleepiness and impaired QOL in subjects with nasal obstruction. A variant of SDB such as silent upper respiratory resistance syndrome may participate in this phenomenon in the absence of snoring.