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Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep Medicine
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Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke

Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MDMedical Director

Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep

Medicine

Page 2: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Overview

• Sleep apnea (OSA)• Stroke• How OSA/Stroke are connected• Supporting Evidence• Prevention/therapy• Summary

Page 3: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Sleep In Modern Society

• Irrevocably altered by the industrial revolution– Around the clock operations

• Shift work• Siesta now looked down upon (except in Spain)• Sleep deprivation (less than 8 hours of sleep) leads to sleep

debt now the norm instead of the exception

• Substandard levels of wakefulness– Sleepiness related human errors

• Three Mile Island Nuclear disaster• Exxon Valdez oil tanker• Challenger disaster• Human error causes 60-90% of all industrial and

transportation accidents

Page 4: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Sleep In Modern Society

• Sleep now less valued– Daily sleep loss manifests as accumulative sleep

debt• Increased tendency to fall asleep• Decreased psychomotor performance• “Micro sleep” – brief lapse in vigilance

– Study of long-haul truck drivers• Averaged 4.8 hrs sleep per day• 2 fold increase in motor vehicle accidents• Also commonly have little insight to the risks of sleep

deprivation• Also have tendency toward obesity and increased

incidence of OSA

Page 5: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Population

Famous faces with a sleeping disorder

Name their sleep disorder.

SLEEP APNEA

How many in the population share this disorder?

12 to 18 million Americans; 1 to 3% of children 2-18

50 % ARE UNDIAGNOSED

Page 6: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Daytime Hypersomnolence

Page 7: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Epworth Sleepiness Scale

• Chance of dozing in certain situations (rank low to high chance (1-3) – normal is < 10– Sitting and reading– Watching TV– Riding as a passenger in a car– Sitting, inactive in a public place– Lying down to rest in the afternoon– Sitting and talking with someone– Sitting quietly after lunch without alcohol– Sitting at a stop light

Page 8: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Sleep Apnea • > 18 million affect (1 in 15 Americans)• Prevalence (Men 24%, Women 9%)• 10 - 20% are children• Untreated or undiagnosed >80%• Health cost for individual with untreated

sleep apnea is about $1,336/yr

National Sleep Foundation

Page 9: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Types of Sleep Apnea

•Obstructive (Apnea and Hypopnea)

• Central Sleep Apnea

• Mixed Sleep Apnea

Page 10: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

What is Obstructive sleep apnea

• Recurrent episode of airway obstruction during sleep

• lasting at least 10 seconds

• can be associated with arousal or decrease in oxygen level

Page 11: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

How is OSA measured

AHI (Apnea/hypopnea index) or RDI (Respiratory Disturbance Index)• AHI < 5 (normal)• AHI 5 -15 (mild)• AHI >15 - 30 (moderate)• AHI > 30 (severe)

Page 12: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Symptoms/signs of OSA

• Snoring • Gasping or choking from sleep• Excessive daytime sleepiness• Daytime fatigue• Cognitive dysfunction (memory,

concentration)• Change in mood (irritable)• Unrefreshed sleep

Page 13: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

• Prevalence (Wisconsin Cohort Study)– Highly prevalent disorder

• Ages 30 – 60– Men

» 20% - significant OSA (RDI > 5)» 4% - OSA with reported hypersomnolence

– Women• 9.4% - significant OSA (RDI > 5)• 2% - OSA with reported hypersomnolence

Page 14: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Components of the Upper Airway

Nose

Nasopharynx

Oropharynx

Laryngopharynx

Larynx

Page 15: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Large Tonsils and Airway Narrowing

• Compromised pharynx on exam

• Polysomnography results:– Heavy snoring– Airway occlusion– OSA– Desaturations– Cardiac arrhythmias

Page 16: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Page 17: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Apnea A complete blockage of the airway despite efforts to breathe. Notice the

effort gradually increasing ending in airway opening.

Airway Obstructs Airway opens

• EKG

• Airflow

(gradually increases)• Abdominal Effort

(paradoxing)

• Thoracic Effort

• SaO2

Page 18: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Clinical Features

• Obesity (BMI > 28 Kg/m2)• Neck Circumference (> 17 inches)• Dental Overbite• Retrognathia• High/narrow hard palate• Elongated uvula• Low riding soft palate• Enlarged tonsils• Macroglossia• Deviated nasal septum with increased air flow

resistance• Polycythemia

Page 19: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

OSA and Hypertension

• Peppard et al, NEJM 342: 1378, 2000 (709 pts)

Baseline AHI Adjusted odds ratio

0 events/hr 1.0 (reference)

0.1 – 4.9 events/hr 1.42

5.0 – 14.9 events/hr 2.03

> 15 events/hr 2.894 year follow up

p < .002

Page 20: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

• Sleep Heart Health Study (Nieto et al, JAMA 283: 1829, 2000)– 6132 patients underwent home unattended

polysomnography

• Findings– Increased risk of hypertension (RDI > 5)

– Increased risk of cerebral vascular disease (RDI > 5)

– Increased risk of CHF (RDI > 5)

Page 21: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

• Diagnosis– Overnight Polysomnography (level I) Measurements

Sleep state Respirations

EEG Respiratory airflow

EOG Respiratory effort

EMG Oxygen saturation

Snoring

Other Variables• ECG• Tibialis EMG• Body position

Page 22: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

• Diagnosis– Portable Sleep Monitors (hospital studies)

• Level III– Airflow– Respiratory effort– SaO2– ECG

• Level IV (poor sensitivity and specificity)– SaO2– Respiratory effort

Page 23: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Untreated OSA increases your Risk

• High blood pressure• Heart disease (abnormal heart

rhythm, heart failure)

•Stroke• Depression• Diabetes• Accidents• Death

Page 24: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Stroke (cerebrovascular disease)

• 2nd - cause of death (worldwide)• 3rd - cause of death (USA, #1 heart

& #2 cancer)• #1 leading cause of disability in US• Affects 700,000 individual; annually• 150,000 people die per year• Stroke health care cost >$40

billion/year

Page 25: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Stroke - Definition

• Reduction or loss of blood flow to a particular region of the brain and it is associated with a neurological deficit (transient or permanent).

Page 26: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Types of Stroke• Ischemic stroke (clogged pipe)

– TIA (transient ischemic attack)- AKA (Mini-stroke)

– Mostly seen in OSA patients

• Cerebral Hemorrhage - bleeding into brain and surrounding tissue (Busted pipe)

Page 27: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Ischemic Stroke

Page 28: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Hemorrhagic stroke

Page 29: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Symptoms of stroke

• Weakness• Numbness• Language disturbance• Visual changes• Dizziness• Headache• Unsteadiness

Page 30: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Risk factors for stroke• High blood pressure• Heart disease (abnormal heart

rhythm)• Diabetes• High cholesterol• Smoking• Age

•Sleep apnea (OSA)• Obesity

Page 31: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Stroke

• OSA is common in Stroke patients (70%)• Stroke occurs in early morning (4am and

12 pm)• Increase risk with higher AHI/RDI• Increase risk with age• Increase risk in people who have sleep

apnea and heart disease• OSA worsens after stroke ( esp acute

phase)

Page 32: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

What connects OSA to stroke

• Sleep apnea increase your risk

High blood pressureHeart diseaseAbnormal heart

rhythmDiabetes

• Stroke risk factors are

High blood pressure

Heart disease Atrial fibrillation Diabetes

Page 33: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

How does sleep apnea lead to stroke

• Decrease cerebral blood flow during apnea

• Hypoxemia (low oxygenation)• Sympathetic activation (increase

BP/HR)•Abnormal heart rhythm and

rate

Page 34: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

How does sleep apnea lead to stroke

• Coagulation (increase blood clot formation)

• Disruption of lining of blood vessels

• Inflammatory markers (CRP, IL6)• Metabolic deregulation ( Insulin,

leptin)

Page 35: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Portela et al, cerebrovascular diseases

Page 36: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Study

• Conducted at Yale Medical Center• 1022 participants enrolled but only 842

completed– 573 with OSA (AHI- 35), 325 w/o OSA ( AHI<2)

• Mean age - 60yrs old• Follow up of 2-4yrs• Adjusted for age/sex/race, smoking,

alcohol intake, BMI, DM, HTN, AF, high cholesterol.

Page 37: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Results

• OSA group - 22 stroke, 50 death

• Control group - 2 stroke, 16 death

Hazard ratio 1.97; (95% CI

1.12-3.48), P=0.01 Yaggi et al, NEJM, 2005

Page 38: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

More evidence

• Another study of 1189 subjects from the general population

• Individuals (#99) with Sleep apnea (AHI>20) was associated with increased risk of having a stroke

(OR 4.31; 95% CI

1.31-14.15; P=0.02)

Arzt et al, AM J Respir

Crit care Med, 2005

Page 39: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Who snores more, Men or women?

Page 40: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Snoring

• Studies suggest it is a risk factor for ischemic stroke

• Multiple Studies show it increases blood pressure

• Vibration from snoring increase plaque formation in the carotid artery.

Page 41: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.
Page 42: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Snoring• Study from Japan• 167 patients with OSA• mean age - 47• After control for High BP, DM, high

cholesterol• Results shows patients with

– High AHI have increase carotid artery thickness (measured by ultrasound)

– Decrease thickness after CPAP therapy

Suzuki et al, Sleep, 2004

Page 43: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Brain scan in OSA patients

• Brain MRI shows silent brain infarct in 25% of patient with moderate to severe OSA

Minoguchi et al, AM J Respir Crit care

Med, 2007

• Higher prevalence of sleep apnea in patients with vascular dementia compared with patients with Alzheimer’s disease or control of similar age

Erkinjuntti et al, sleep, 1987

Page 44: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

How does the Presence of OSA Affect Stroke Recovery?

• Studies suggest that stroke patients with OSA have – Reduce motivation– decrease cognitive capacity – Prolong rehab stay– May increase the risk of recurrent stroke

and death.

Page 45: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

How can you decrease your risk of stroke if you have obstructive sleep Apnea?

Page 46: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Lifestyle changes

• Weight loss• Sleep with head elevated with

wedge or pillow• Avoid sleeping supine • Avoid alcohol consumption at night

Page 47: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Positive pressure therapy

CPAP or Bilevel devices

Page 48: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Use of CPAP and stroke risk

• Successful treatment of sleep apnea with CPAP lowers blood pressure.

(indirectly lowers the risk of stroke)

• Improves blood flow to the brain• CPAP therapy reduces mortality,

especially after stroke.

Page 49: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

CPAP Study

• 5yr follow study from Spain• 166 patients with stroke• CPAP treatment offered to patient

with AHI > 20• Patient followed for 1,3,6, then q6

months for 5 yrs

Page 50: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Martinez-garcia et al, Am J respir Crit Care med, 2009

Page 51: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Issues of CPAP compliance

• Study of 105 pts shows only about <70% of patient with OSA and stroke actually adhere to CPAP therapy

• CPAP compliance is poor • Difficulty using mask• Motor deficit (facial weakness)• Difficulty understanding

Wessendorf et al

Page 52: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Other OSA treatments

• But no studies to justify efficacy

•Oral appliances( may decrease snoring)

•Surgery ( Jaw advancement, soft tissue)

Page 53: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Cure for OSA

•Tracheotomy

Page 54: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

Summary

• OSA is a risk factor for Stroke• OSA patients have an increase of

stroke and death• OSA needs to be treated• Some evidence shows CPAP

decreases the risk of stroke and mortality in OSA patients

Page 55: Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Stroke Muhammad A. Hamadeh, MD Medical Director Advocate Christ Sleep Disorders Center Diplomat of the American Board of Sleep.

References:

• Young T, Finn Laurel, Peppard P, Szklo-Coxe M, Austin D, Nieto F, Stubbs R, Hia K. Sleep-disordered breathing and Mortality: eighteen year follow-up of the Wisconsin sleep cohort. Sleep 2008; 31 (8):1071-1078

• Shamsuzzaman A, Gersh BJ, Somers VK. Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Implications for Cardiac and Vascular disease. JAMA 2003; 290:1906-1914

• Pack AI, Gislason T. Obstructive Sleep Apnea and cardiovascular Disease: A Perspective and Future directions. Progress in cardiovascular diseases;51:434-451.

• Munoz R, Duran-Cantolla J, Martinez-Vila E et al. Severe sleep apnea and risk of Ischemic stroke in the elderly. Stroke 2006;37:2317-2321.

• Yaggi HK, Concato J, Kernan W. Obstructive sleep apnea as a risk factor for stroke and death. NEJM 2005; 353: 2034-2041.

• Culebras Antonio. Sleep and Stroke. Seminars in Neurology/Volume 2009; 29: 438-445.• Somers VK, White DP, Amin R. Sleep Apnea and Cardiovascular. J AM Coll Cardiology 2008;52:686-717.• Portela PC, Fumado JC, Garcia HQ, Borrego FR. Sleep-disorder breathing and acute stroke.

Cerebrovascular Disease 2009; 27: 104-110.• Martinez-Garcia MA, Soler-Cataluna JJ. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Treatment reduces Mortality in

patients with ischemic stroke and obstructive sleep apnea: A 5 year follow – up study. Am J respir Crit Care Med 2009; 180: 36-41.

• Bonnin-Vilaplana M, Arboix A, Parra et al. Journal of Neurology 2009.• Butt, M, et al, Obstructive sleep apnea and cardiovascular disease, Int J Cardiol ( 2009).• Bassetti Claudio L, Milanova M, and Gugger M. Sleep- Disordered Breathing and Acute Ischemic Stroke:

Diagnosis, Risk factors, Treatment, Evolution, and Long-term Clinical Outcome. Stroke 2006; 37: 967-972. • Suzuki T, Nakano H, Maekawa J, et al. Obstructive sleep Apnea and Carotid-Artery Intima- Media

Thickness. SLEEP 2004; 27: 129-133.• Tosun A, Kokturk O, Ciftci TU, Sepici V. Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Ischemic Stroke Patients. Clinics. 2008;

63; 625-630. • Arzt M, Young T, Finn L, Skatrud JB, Bradley TD. Association of sleep- disorded breathing and the

occurrence of stroke. Am J Respir Crit care Med 2005; 172(11); 1447-1451.• Minoguchi K, Yokeo T, Tazaki T, et al. Silent Brain infarction and platelet activation in obstructive sleep

apnea. Am j Respir Crit Care Med. 2007;175:612-617.• Netzer N, Werner P et al, Blood flow of the middle cerebral artery with sleep disorder breathing:

correlation with obstructive hypopneas. Stroke 1998;29(1): 87-93.