Conrad Iber

Conrad Iber
  • MD
  • University of Minnesota

About

94
Publications
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15,270
Citations
Current institution
University of Minnesota

Publications

Publications (94)
Article
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is the most common form of sleep-disordered breathing. OSA is characterized by repetitive upper airway closure causing chronic intermittent hypoxia. The prevalence of OSA has significantly increased with the global epidemic in obesity. Despite the recognition of the serious health consequences of OSA, many patients wit...
Article
We conducted an economic analysis of the HomePAP study, a multicenter randomized clinical trial that compared home-based versus laboratory-based testing for the diagnosis and management of OSA. A cost-minimization analysis from the payer and provider perspectives was performed, given that 3-mo clinical outcomes were equivalent. Seven academic sleep...
Article
Full-text available
Study objectives: Measures of health-related quality of life (HRQL) specific for sleep disorders have had limited psychometric evaluation in the context of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). We investigated the psychometric properties of the Functional Outcomes of Sleep Questionnaire (FOSQ) and Sleep Apnea Quality of Life Instrument (SAQLI). We...
Article
Introduction: Lung to finger circulation time (LFCT) can be estimated from polysomnography (PSG) in the presence of an apneic event by using oxygen as an indicator and a finger as the site of detection. The purpose of this study was to refine the methodology of LFCT measurement and to compare LFCT in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) wit...
Article
Full-text available
Chyloptysis is a rare clinical problem that is associated with conditions affecting lymphatic channels in the thorax. Diagnosis is usually made when the patients present with expectoration of milky-white sputum or of thick tenacious mucus in the shape of smaller bronchi (bronchial cast). Typically the symptoms resolve after coughing up of the bronc...
Article
Reduced upper airway muscle activity during sleep is a key contributor to obstructive sleep apnoea pathogenesis. Hypoglossal nerve stimulation activates upper airway dilator muscles, including the genioglossus, and has the potential to reduce obstructive sleep apnoea severity. The objective of this study was to examine the safety, feasibility and e...
Article
Study objectives: Black race has been associated with decreased continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) adherence. Short sleep duration, long sleep latency, and insomnia complaints may affect CPAP adherence as they affect sleep and opportunity to use CPAP. We assessed whether self-reported sleep measures were associated with CPAP adherence and...
Article
Full-text available
The definitions of respiratory events and recommendations concerning monitoring technology will continue to evolve as more knowledge is gained about the effect of using different definitions or technology on outcomes. Improved ability to predict patients who will improve symptomatically with treatment (especially in patients with "milder" obstructi...
Article
To test the utility of an integrated clinical pathway for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) diagnosis and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment using portable monitoring devices. Randomized, open-label, parallel group, unblinded, multicenter clinical trial comparing home-based, unattended portable monitoring for diagnosis and autotitrati...
Article
This paper summarizes the results of the first three examinations (2007, 2009, and 2011) of the Sleep Medicine Certification Examination, administered by its six sponsoring American Board of Medical Specialty Boards. There were 2,913 candidates who took the 2011 examination through one of three pathways-self-attested practice experience, previous c...
Article
There are few established predictors of CPAP adherence; poor adherence limits its effectiveness. We investigated whether race, education level, and residential economic status predict CPAP adherence in participants enrolled in a trial with standard access to treatment. A multi-center randomized trial of home vs. lab-based evaluation and treatment o...
Article
Full-text available
Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) devices are used during sleep to treat patients with diurnal chronic alveolar hypoventilation (CAH). Bilevel positive airway pressure (BPAP) using a mask interface is the most commonly used method to provide ventilatory support in these patients. BPAP devices deliver separately adjustable inspiratory...
Article
Normal sleep is associated with slowing of the heart rate and occasional asymptomatic selflimited rhythm disturbances. Obstructive sleep apnea produces cyclical changes in heart rate and an increase in the occurrence of cardiac dysrhythmias. Sleep medicine practitioners should be familiar with routine methods, limitations, and scoring of cardiac ev...
Article
Full-text available
Positive airway pressure (PAP) devices are used to treat patients with sleep related breathing disorders (SRBDs), including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). After a patient is diagnosed with OSA, the current standard of practice involves performing attended polysomnography (PSG), during which positive airway pressure is adjusted throughout the record...
Article
Full-text available
In November 2007, the first Certification Examination in Sleep Medicine was administered to 1,882 candidates under the cosponsorship of five member boards of the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS)--the American Board of Internal Medicine, the American Board of Family Medicine, the American Board of Otolaryngology, the American Board of Pe...
Article
Full-text available
Positive airway pressure (PAP) devices are used to treat patients with sleep related breathing disorders (SRBDs), including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). After a patient is diagnosed with OSA, the current standard of practice involves performing attended polysomnography (PSG), during which positive airway pressure is adjusted throughout the record...
Article
Standardized guidelines for polysomnography (PSG) have not specified methods for acquiring or interpreting electrocardiographic (ECG) data. The practice of single lead ECG monitoring during PSG may allow identification of simple measures of cardiac rhythm but reduces the ability to detect myocardial ischemia and to define cardiac intervals. Althoug...
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Full-text available
The 1968 Rechtschaffen and Kales (R & K) sleep scoring manual was published 15 years after REM sleep was discovered. Advances in the ensuing 28 years warranted a re-look at visual scoring of sleep stages. This paper describes the work of the AASM Visual Scoring Task Force, including methodology, a literature review and the rationale behind the new...
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Full-text available
Age is probably the single most crucial factor determining how humans sleep. Age and level of vigilance significantly influence the electroencephalogram (EEG) and the polysomnogram (PSG). The Pediatric Task Force provide an evidence-based review of the age-related development of the polysomnographic features of sleep in neonates, infants, and child...
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Full-text available
Positive airway pressure (PAP) is used to treat obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), central sleep apnea (CSA), and chronic hypoventilation. This document provides a systematic analysis and grading of peer-reviewed, published clinical studies pertaining to application of PAP treatment in adults. The paper is divided into 5 sections, each addressing a ser...
Article
Positive airway pressure (PAP) is used to treat obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), central sleep apnea (CSA), and chronic hypoventilation. This document provides a systematic analysis and grading of peer-reviewed, published clinical studies pertaining to application of PAP treatment in adults. The paper is divided into 5 sections, each addressing a ser...
Article
Sleep-related breathing disorders are a heterogeneous group of conditions that may be associated with alterations in the structure of sleep, in sleep quality, and in gas exchange during sleep. Obstructive sleep apnea represents the most frequent cause of sleep-related breathing disorders, which encompass a diversity of conditions that either compli...
Article
Nocturnal gastroesophageal reflux, which may result in nocturnal heartburn, has been demonstrated to be associated with a more severe form of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). The aim of this study was to determine the clinical predictors of heartburn during sleep in a large prospective cohort study. Study subjects were members of the parent...
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Full-text available
Sleep Medicine has only recently been recognized as a specialty of medicine. Its development is based on an increasing amount of knowledge concerning the physiology of sleep, circadian biology and the pathophysiology of sleep disorders. This review chronicles the major advances in sleep science over the past 70 years and the development of the prim...
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Full-text available
To compare polysomnographic recordings obtained in the home and laboratory setting. Multicenter study comparing unsupervised polysomnography performed in the participant's home with polysomnography supervised at an academic sleep disorders center, using a randomized sequence of study setting. Sleep Heart Health Study (SHHS) standardized polysomnogr...
Article
Full-text available
To determine the short-term variability of indices of disturbed respiration and sleep during 2 nights of unattended nonlaboratory polysomnography conducted several months apart. Participants were randomly selected using a block design with stratification on preliminary estimates of 2 criteria: respiratory disturbance index [RDI3% (apnea or hypopnea...
Article
Epidemiologic literature suggests that persons with clinically diagnosed sleep apnoea frequently have impaired cognitive function, but whether milder degrees of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) are associated with cognitive dysfunction in the general population is largely unknown. Approximately 1700 subjects free of clinically diagnosed SDB underwe...
Article
We hypothesize that clinical recognition rates for obstructive sleep apnea-hypoapnea syndrome (OSAHS) are influenced by comorbidity and demographic factors. Data on medical disorders, symptoms of sleep disorders, and cardiovascular risk factors gathered from 15,699 individuals in the Sleep Heart Health Study were compared. Participants were classif...
Article
To evaluate study failure and sensor loss in unattended home polysomnography and their relationship to age, gender, obesity, and severity of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). A cross-sectional analysis of data gathered prospectively for the Sleep Heart Health Study (SHHS). Unattended polysomnography was performed in participants' homes by the staff...
Article
Varying approaches to measuring the respiratory disturbance index (RDI) may lead to discrepant estimates of the severity of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). In this study, we assessed the impact of varying the use of corroborative data (presence and degree of desaturation and/or arousal) to identify hypopneas and apneas. The relationships among 10...
Article
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is a well recognized cause of excessive sleepiness; however, the relation of sleepiness to mild sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), which affects as much as half the adult population, is uncertain. In order to explore this relation, we conducted a cross-sectional cohort study of community-dwelling adults participating...
Article
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is a well recognized cause of excessive sleepiness; however, the relation of sleepiness to mild sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), which affects as much as half the adult population, is uncertain. In order to explore this relation, we conducted a cross-sectional cohort study of community-dwelling adults participating...
Article
Full-text available
This paper reviews the data collection, processing, and analysis approaches developed to obtain comprehensive unattended polysomnographic data for the Sleep Heart Health Study, a multicenter study of the cardiovascular consequences of sleep-disordered breathing. Protocols were developed and implemented to standardize in-home data collection procedu...
Article
Full-text available
The Sleep Heart Health Study (SHHS) is a prospective cohort study designed to investigate obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and other sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) as risk factors for the development of cardiovascular disease. The study is designed to enroll 6,600 adult participants aged 40 years and older who will undergo a home polysomnogram to as...
Article
Patients who undergo mechanical ventilation for severe asthma are at risk of developing diffuse muscle weakness because of acute myopathy. The relative importance of corticosteroids and neuromuscular paralysis in causing the myopathy is controversial, and it is uncertain whether the chemical structure of the drug used to induce paralysis influences...
Article
Passive lung inflation in humans causes reflex expiratory prolongation that is abolished by vagal blockade. We have studied two aspects of this classic Breuer-Hering reflex in humans: the effect of pulmonary denervation from bilateral lung transplantation, and the effect of alveolar hypocapnia. Lung inflations were performed in six normal subjects...
Article
We assessed the cardiovascular responses to systemic normocapnic hypoxia in five normal subjects, five double lung transplant patients with lung denervation and intact hearts, and five patients with denervated hearts. Progressive normocapnic hypoxia was induced over 10-15 min and maintained for 2-3 min each at 90, 87, 84, and 80% arterial O2 satura...
Article
Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is used as a noninvasive measure of vagal cardiac input, but its causative mechanisms in humans remain undetermined. We compared the RSA of five lung-denervated double-lung transplant patients with intact hearts to six normal (N) control subjects, five heart-denervated patients, and two liver transplant patients a...
Article
The objective assessment of patients with a presumptive diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has primarily used attended polysomnographic study. Recent technologic advances and issues of availability, convenience and cost have led to a rapid increase in the use of portable recording devices. However, limited scientific information has been pu...
Article
To assess the prevalence of deep venous thrombosis with venous duplex ultrasonography (US) in patients who underwent radionuclide lung scanning for evaluation of clinically suspected pulmonary embolism (PE) and to assess the clinical usefulness of this type of US in the selection of patients for anticoagulant therapy. Two hundred eighty-five lung s...
Article
We determined the influences of breathing-induced changes in intrathoracic and intravascular pressures, central respiratory drive, and pulmonary vagal feedback on the within-breath variation in skeletal muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in humans. MSNA (peroneal microneurography), arterial blood pressure (Finapres finger monitor), and tidal...
Article
Mycetomas usually grow within preexisting cavities and frequently lead to pulmonary hemorrhage. We describe four males, aged 38 to 72 years, in whom myceotomas were diagnosed by FNA. Preexisting cavitary lesions resulted from tuberculosis, anaerobic abscess, and bullous lung disease (two cases). Fine needle aspiration yielded tangled mats of fungal...
Article
Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) has become an accepted method for treating obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), with a reported success rate as high as 77%, depending upon inclusionary and outcome criteria. The authors reviewed the records of 90 patients with moderately severe OSA (apnea plus hypopnea index [AHI] greater than 20) who underwent UPPP at e...
Article
The purpose of this study was to demonstrate a neuromechanical inhibitory effect on respiratory muscle activity during mechanical ventilation and to determine whether upper and lower airway receptors provide this inhibitory feedback. Several protocols were completed during mechanical ventilation: (1) positive and negative pressure changes in the up...
Article
The role of single night studies and the determinants of effective nasal continuous positive airway (CPAP) pressures were determined in 412 consecutive patients between 1984 and 1989. Patients chosen for analysis had an apnea index (AI) of greater than or equal to 20 hr-1 prior to CPAP. The AI was 67 +/- 30 hr-1, the body mass index (BMI) was 36 +/...
Article
To determine the causes of excess minute ventilation in patients initiated on mechanical ventilation. Prospective study of recently intubated, mechanically ventilated patients. The medical ICU in a county hospital. Fifty-two mechanically ventilated medical ICU patients were studied within 36 hrs of intubation. Patients were all supported with volum...
Article
During continuous positive pressure ventilation (CPPV), mean airway pressure and lung volume will be influenced both by the tidal volume (VT) employed and the amount of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). The effect of varying levels of CPPV on PaO2 and cardiac output (Q) has been previously assessed by adjusting the level of PEEP at constant...
Article
Address reprint requests to Mark W. Mahowald, MD, Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center, Hennepin County Medical Center, 701 Park Ave South, Minneapolis, MN 55415.
Article
The influence of acid-base status on plasma catecholamines during exercise was investigated in six healthy volunteers. Incremental exercise to 175 W was performed on a bicycle ergometer under four conditions: 1) control, 2) during forced hyperventilation (HV), 3) after pretreatment with acetazolamide (AZE), and 4) while breathing 4% CO2. Resting pl...
Article
Since absorption of nebulized and subcutaneous terbutaline may be delayed or decreased during episodes of severe asthma, a preliminary trial of intravenous terbutaline was instituted in five adult patients with status asthmaticus. The terbutaline was administered as a bolus followed by a continuous infusion of 0.1-0.4 micrograms/kg/min. Although th...
Article
During February 1987 an outbreak of nitrogen dioxide-induced respiratory illness occurred among players and spectators of two high school hockey games played at an indoor ice arena in Minnesota. The source of the nitrogen dioxide was the malfunctioning engine of the ice resurfacer. Case patients experienced acute onset of cough, hemoptysis, and/or...
Article
Three patients with respiratory muscle weakness developed sleep fragmentation due to nonobstructive apnea and hypopnea. In two patients in whom inspiratory muscle electromyogram was recorded, the apneas and hypopneas were terminated only by arousal and excessive recruitment of accessory muscles. Nocturnal rocking bed ventilatory support resulted in...
Article
We compared the effects of transdermal clonidine and oral atenolol on acute exercise performance and on conditioning response to an 8-week program of regular aerobic exercise in young, otherwise healthy subjects with mild hypertension. The study was a double-blind, randomized, parallel-group study with placebo control. Twenty-seven subjects (11 rec...
Article
The ventilatory response following 15 seconds of inspiratory airway occlusion at functional residual capacity (FRC) was studied in nine normal supine awake subjects. Expired minute ventilation (VE), CO2 output (VCO2), tidal volume (VT), and end-tidal PCO2 (PETCO2) were measured on a breath-by-breath basis. Alveolar PCO2 rose 5.6 mm Hg during the ap...
Article
Pulmonary embolism (PE) is often unrecognized or misdiagnosed because of the lack of specificity of clinical signs and symptoms. PE shares many of the clinical features of pneumonia and is therefore often unrecognized in elderly patients who present with low-grade fever, modest leukocytosis, and pulmonary infiltrates. Assessment of clinical risk fa...
Article
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is a major infectious complication of immunodeficiency states, including the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) is a safe and effective procedure for making this diagnosis. In addition to the characteristic organisms, both histologic and cytologic material often reveals exuda...
Article
Verapamil was given to 16 consecutive patients with multifocal atrial tachycardia. Intravenous verapamil was administered at a rate of up to 1 mg/min while heart rate and systolic blood pressure were being monitored. The final 5 patients received 1 g of intravenous calcium gluconate 5 minutes before treatment with verapamil; the first 11 received n...
Article
A 43-yr-old woman developed severe exertional dyspnea after an unsuccessful attempt to correct a total right anomalous pulmonary venous connection. A clotted anastomosis resulted in unilateral pulmonary venous obstruction. Investigation excluded airway disease, left ventricular failure, and severe pulmonary hypertension as the cause of dyspnea. Exe...
Article
A biofeedback model of hyperventilation during exercise was used to assess the independent effects of pH, arterial CO2 partial pressure (PaCO2), and minute ventilation on blood lactate during exercise. Eight normal subjects were studied with progressive upright bicycle exercise (2-min intervals, 25-W increments) under three experimental conditions...
Article
Hypopneas or pauses in respiratory effort frequently precede episodes of obstructive sleep apnea resulting in mixed apneas. We studied five subjects after chronic tracheostomy for obstructive sleep apnea. During stable non-REM (NREM) sleep, subjects breathed entirely through the tracheostomy. Tracheostomy occlusion caused experimental obstructive a...
Article
Cavitation developed in 4 of 24 patients with bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia seen in 1 yr. Two of them had roentgenographic evidence of massive pulmonary gangrene. A total of 3 patients developed putrid sputum at the time of cavitation, proving that anaerobes were present. Culture confirmation of anaerobic etiology (Bacteroides fragilis) was obt...
Article
We have evaluated the sensitivity of frequency dependence (spon-1.5 Hz) of dynamic compliance (Cdyn) and pulmonary resistance (RL) by introducing two bronchial catheters in dog's lungs. We measured the differential bronchial pressure (Pbr) and defined the transfer ratio (H) as Pbr/Ppleural at points of zero mouth flow. Calculations predict H to be...
Article
Ventilation was studied during wakefulness and sleep in six healthy humans in normoxia (mean barometric pressure (PB) = 740 torr), and in hypobaric hypoxia (PB = 455 torr). Hypoxia caused hyperventilation and hypocapnic alkalosis (delta Pa,CO2 = -7 torr) during wakefulness and in all sleep states. Periodic breathing was the predominant pattern of b...
Article
The onset of severe obstructive sleep apnea occurred in one patient as he developed adult-acquired micrognathia from destruction of the temporomandibular joints by rheumatoid arthritis. Despite the anatomic deformity, nearly normal upper airway patency was maintained during wakefulness, as measured by upper airway resistance during peak tidal flow...
Article
Nine cases of paragonimiasis have been encountered in Laotian Hmong immigrants from Camp Ban Vinai in Thailand. Symptoms included cough, hemoptysis, and fever. Chest x-ray films showed segmental infiltrates and pleural effusions, often bilateral. The clinical presentation mimics tuberculosis. All Hmong patients with chronic infiltrates and pleural...
Article
Ventilatory and timing responses to repetitive and sustained inspiratory resistive loading were assessed in six naive male subjects during wakefulness (AW) and non-REM sleep (NREM). In five of six subjects, tidal volume (VT) was maintained or increased with repetitive five-breath loading periods during wakefulness. In these five subjects, mouth occ...
Article
Three normal subjects and 5 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic CO2 retention were studied to determine the effect of chronic ventilatory stimulation with medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) on ventilatory control and pulmonary gas exchange during sleep. All patients had lowered PaCO2 after treatment with MPA while awake....
Article
A 58-yr-old man with hypothyroidism and sleep apnea syndrome was studied to determine the cause of the nocturnal obstructive apnea and oxygen desaturation. Control studies showed free thyroxine (T4) concentration of 0.7 ng/dl (normal, 0.8 to 2.3 ng/dl), and thyroid-stimulating hormone of 32 microIU/ml (normal, less than 12 microIU/ml). Weight, pulm...
Article
A 45-yr-old man with limb girdle muscular dystrophy, bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis, chronic carbon dioxide retention, and hypersomnolence was studied to determine the causes of hypoventilation during wakefulness and during sleep. Awake hypoventilation was associated with an insufficient inspiratory effort in the presence of inefficient respirat...
Article
Several investigators in the past have suggested different techniques to assess to status of the small airways (2-3 mm diameter). These are the site of diseases such as chronic bronchitis, emphysema and some cases of asthma. However, the contribution of these small airways is less than 20% of the total resistance to breathing, since the total cross...

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