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Mouth Breathing Habits Improvement Intervention

Improvement of Mouth Breathing Habits During Sleep in Patients With Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05404438
Enrollment
24
Registered
2022-06-03
Start date
2018-09-09
Completion date
2022-01-31
Last updated
2022-06-03

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

OSA

Keywords

mouth breathing, mouth puffing, sleep apnea, oral appliance

Brief summary

This study intends to investigate the improvement in patients with OSA through objective measurement, including oxygen desaturation index (ODI) and the percentage reduction in intermittent mouth puffing (IMP) before and after the intervention. The oral appliances are placed between the tongue and the soft palate to reduce the oral ventilation space. A total of 24 participants aged between 36 and 57 years were identified with ODI above 5 events/hour by measuring their blood oxygen and with an originally designed mouth puffing detector to find out those who were still mouth-puffed when their mouths were taped. A suitable appliance was chosen for the participants between the two originally designed oral appliances, tongue pressed device (TPD) and tongue elevated device (TED), and the intervention lasted for six weeks.

Interventions

A pre-experimental, single-group pretest-posttest design was performed. At stage one, each participant underwent a 2-day general sleeping test and a 2-day sleeping test with mouth tape. At stage two, participants underwent conventional impressions for TPD and TED appliances and were then randomly assigned to wear the TPD or TED; together for two days of sleeping test with their mouth taped. After a 2-day break (washout), with the same procedure, participants wore the other appliance for another 2-day sleeping test and decided accordingly the optimal appliance that had reduced their ODI scores more. At stage three, participants wore their optimal appliance mouth-taped during sleep for 6 weeks. At the end of the intervention, all participants underwent few days sleeping test for final results.

Sponsors

National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
20 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* (1) aged 20-60 years old, * (2) having symptoms of OSA including snoring, daytime sleepiness, etc. * (3) AHI & ODI \>=5 events/hour,

Exclusion criteria

* (1) taken sleep medication within the last two months or were on long-term use, * (2) reported tobacco, alcohol, caffeine or drug addiction, * (3) cancer, cardiovascular disease, psychiatric illness, kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, or other sleep disorders.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Differences in OSA-related variables before and after the six weeks oral device interventionbaseline, six weeks after interventionAccording to OSA-related variables, we can analyze participants' ODI (events/hours), mean SpO2 (%), the lowest SpO2(%), and the percentage of total record time with oxygen saturation below 90% (T90) to evaluate their objective sleep quality.
Differences in percentage of mouth puffing before and after the six weeks oral device interventionbaseline, six weeks after interventionAccording to the number of mouth puffing by minutes, mouth puffing signals were divided into four types, including non-mouth puffing (NMP, no or less than 3 times MPSs on both sides), complete mouth puffing (CMP, regularly MPS on both sides, usually above 8-10 times), intermittent mouth puffing (IMP, irregularly MPS in both side, usually between 3-8 times), and side mouth puffing (SMP, showing one-side MPSs) to evaluate the percentage of mouth breathing while sleeping.

Countries

Taiwan

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026