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Comparing home polysomnography with transcutaneous CO2 monitoring to laboratory polysomnography in children with neuromuscular disorders

Clinical utility of home polysomnography in children with neuromuscular disorders is limited by lack of evidence that sleep-disordered breathing can be reliably identified and inability to diagnose hypoventilation because carbon dioxide is not measured.

Citation:
Withers A, Pettigrew G, Filmer K, Lam J, Downs J, Wilson A. Comparing home polysomnography with transcutaneous CO2 monitoring to laboratory polysomnography in children with neuromuscular disorders. J Clin Sleep Med. 2025;21(4):639-48.

Keywords:
carbon dioxide; hypoventilation; muscle weakness; polysomnography; respiratory muscles; sleep apnea syndromes

Abstract:
Clinical utility of home polysomnography in children with neuromuscular disorders is limited by lack of evidence that sleep-disordered breathing can be reliably identified and inability to diagnose hypoventilation because carbon dioxide is not measured.