Tongue function and high-risk sleep-disordered breathing in youth: age-stratified associations and interactions in a Vietnamese cross-sectional study

越南一项横断面研究探讨了青少年舌功能与高危睡眠呼吸障碍之间的年龄分层关联和相互作用。

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Abstract

PURPOSE: To examine associations between tongue function domains and questionnaire-based high-risk sleep-disordered breathing classification across age groups, and to explore interaction effects between functional and anatomical factors. METHODS: A cross-sectional study included 1,244 participants (462 children aged 6–8 years and 782 young adults aged 18–25 years). High-risk classification was defined as meeting ≥ 1 age-appropriate threshold: Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire (PSQ ≥ 8), Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS > 10), or Snoring Severity Scale (SSS ≥ 7) for children; Berlin Questionnaire (≥ 2 positive categories), ESS > 10, or SSS ≥ 7 for young adults. Tongue function included mobility, strength, posture, and orofacial domains. Multivariable logistic regression with backward stepwise selection was used in pooled and age-stratified models. Pre-specified interaction terms were systematically tested to explore effect modification between functional and anatomical factors. RESULTS: The prevalance of high-risk classification was 26.8% in children, 11.9% in young adults, and 17.5% overall. In children, low tongue resting posture (AOR = 1.69) and frequent nocturnal open-mouth posture (AOR = 2.69) were independently associated with high-risk classification. In young adults, better orofacial function (AOR = 0.79), greater posterior mobility (AOR = 0.96), and higher posterior strength (AOR = 0.98) were protective. Posterior mobility and age group moderated the association between tonsillar hypertrophy and high-risk classification (AOR = 0.53 and AOR = 2.06, respectively), though not in age-stratified models. In children, combined tonsillar hypertrophy and restricted posterior mobility were associated with substantially higher prevalence (34.5% vs. 13.8%; dose-response p=.006). CONCLUSIONS: Tongue function showed age-group-specific associations with questionnaire-based high-risk classification. Incorporating both anatomical and functional assessments within age-specific frameworks may improve early identification and inform future research. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11325-026-03666-3.

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