Acoustic respiratory monitoring (ARM) as an adjunct to polysomnography (PSG) in a sleep laboratory

J. M. Goldin, P. Dionysopoulos, N. Kohli, L. Irving, S. Godfrey, N. Gavriely (Parkville, Australia; Haifa, Israel)

Source: Annual Congress 2011 - Obstructive sleep apnoea : physiology, diagnostic tools and technology
Session: Obstructive sleep apnoea : physiology, diagnostic tools and technology
Session type: Poster Discussion
Number: 4965
Disease area: Sleep and breathing disorders

Congress or journal article abstractE-poster

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J. M. Goldin, P. Dionysopoulos, N. Kohli, L. Irving, S. Godfrey, N. Gavriely (Parkville, Australia; Haifa, Israel). Acoustic respiratory monitoring (ARM) as an adjunct to polysomnography (PSG) in a sleep laboratory. Eur Respir J 2011; 38: Suppl. 55, 4965

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Member's Comments

Chan Kevin - 26.11.2011 09:41
Thank you for this very interesting poster. Questions / comments: 1. Data from our work suggests that OSA related cough may not take place during sleep. 2. How do you define cough in your device? We are using the Leicester Cough Monitor. 3. A general question - how clinically useful is the detection of nocturnal wheeze - given that not all wheeze can be explained by asthma? 4. Woudl there be any quality of life data in relation to their cough? Thank you! Kevin Chan
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