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Assessment of Tolerance to the Treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea by Shear Wave Inducer Collar (ET-SAOS-OC)

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Civil Hospices of Lyon

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sleep Apnea

Treatments

Device: shearing wave collar

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05236075
2021-A03183-38 (Other Identifier)
69HCL21_1339

Details and patient eligibility

About

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a common disease, affecting 10-15% of the general adult population. This pathology is characterized by iterative nocturnal episodes of complete or partial obstruction of the upper airways during sleep leading to chronic intermittent nocturnal hypoxia and sleep fragmentation. The number of nocturnal respiratory anomalies per hour of sleep characterizes the severity of the disease with a gradual gradation of severity from mild (from 5 to 15 anomalies per hour) to moderate (15 to 30 anomalies per hour) and severe (over 30 anomalies per hour). The rationale for this severity classification is the increase in morbidity and mortality proportional to the severity of OSA as defined.

OSA is accompanied by a fragmentation of sleep often responsible for excessive daytime sleepiness, causing an increase in occupational accidents with work stoppage and traffic accidents.

The second consequence of repeated nocturnal obstructions is chronic intermittent nocturnal hypoxia which has deleterious cardiovascular effects, constituting an independent cardiovascular risk factor.

Shear waves are elastic waves of low frequency (less than 1000 oscillation per second - 1000Hz). It propagates only in solids and soft solids such as the human body. The propagation of a shear wave generates a reversible micrometric displacement of the particles that make up this medium. The energy of these waves is related to the amplitude of movement of the particles.

Elastography is an imaging modality for measuring the elasticity of biological tissues by shear waves. The shear wave is a mechanical wave sensitive to the change in the elasticity of its propagation medium. This sensitivity is manifested by the variation of its propagation speed. Hardness results in acceleration of the wave and softness in its slowing down.

The therapeutic use of shear waves has never been used for the treatment of sleep apnea but its use could be an additional therapeutic arsenal of Continuous Positive Pressure.

The technology developed by BREAS MEDICAL AB is based on the use of shear waves for the treatment of sleep apnea. The treatment is delivered using a cervical collar equipped with six sources (vibrating pistons) generating shear waves. The treatment generates shear waves at frequencies that vary from 20 to 250 Hz continuously, and at amplitudes less than 50 microns of the same order of magnitude of vibration as snoring. In view of the innovative nature of the treatment, the medico-technical team of BREAS MEDICAL AB carried out an analysis of the risks related to the device and to the propagation of waves, including the norms and standards imposed by the competent bodies.

The investigators would like, in a first-dose study in humans, to assess safety in patients with sleep apnea syndrome.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 69 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Men and women
  • aged 30 to 69 in order to avoid tissue changes in the older age groups of the adult population
  • patients with polysomnography diagnosic of obstructive sleep disorders moderate to severe
  • referred to the Sleep Center of the Croix Rousse Hospital for sleep disorders and suspected of having a sleep apnea syndrome when first making contact in consultation or by phone call.
  • All patients accepting the additional 24 hours instead of the usual 24 hours, ECG, neck vessel Doppler and trial shear wave therapy. This second night will be scheduled at the end of the first night.
  • Patients agreeing to spend this second night in a period of less than 15 days between the first night and the second night
  • Patient without fever >38°C
  • having communicated their signed consent
  • Affiliated with a social security scheme
  • Having a negative PCR covid test in the last 48 hours prior to hospitalization, if used during the protocol.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient with a cardiac pace maker
  • Patient with a tracheostomy
  • Patient with cancerous disease during treatment
  • Persons referred to in articles L1121-5 to L1121-8 of the CSP (pregnant woman, parturient, nursing mother, person deprived of liberty by judicial or administrative decision, person subject to a legal protection measure, cannot be included in clinical trials
  • Patient unable to remove their dentures if concerned
  • Patients with vascular plaques seen on cervical Doppler
  • Patient having presented a pathology in the previous months which contraindicates the continuation of the study at the discretion of one of the medical investigators (new cardiac pathology of less than 3 months, or of 6 months and not stabilized, vascular accident cerebral or transient ischemic attack of less than 3 months, other pathologies of less than 3 months at the discretion of the investigator).
  • Patients with any known cutaneous or deep cervical abnormality (dermatosis, glottic abnormality, Zencker's diverticulum, Basedow, toxic thyroid nodule(s), parathyroid adenoma or hyperplasia, wound, recent scar, burn, etc.)
  • Patients with an implanted electronic device, medical or not; other than implanted automatic pacemakers or pacemakers and defibrillators (cochlear implant, brain implants, RFID chip).
  • Patients suffering from Central nervous sytem disorder such as epilepsy, Parkinson disease.
  • Patients with a cervical malformation or a particular cervical morphology (very wide neck outside collar size range, goiter, etc.) incompatible with the characteristics of the collar.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

36 participants in 1 patient group

patients with polysomnography diagnostic of obstructive sleep disorders moderate to severe
Experimental group
Treatment:
Device: shearing wave collar

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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