{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Respiratory Arousals in Patients with Very Severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea and How They Change after a Non-Framework Surgery. {Author}: Huang EI;Huang SY;Lin YC;Lin CM;Lin CK;Hsu CY;Huang YC;Su JA; {Journal}: Healthcare (Basel) {Volume}: 10 {Issue}: 5 {Year}: May 2022 13 {Factor}: 3.16 {DOI}: 10.3390/healthcare10050902 {Abstract}: Respiratory arousal is the change from a state of sleep to a state of wakefulness following an apnea or hypopnea. In patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), it could have a helpful role to activate upper airway muscles and the resumption of airflow and an opposing role to contribute to greater ventilatory instability, continue cycling, and likely exacerbate OSA. Patients with very severe OSA (apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) ≥ 60 events/h) may have specific chemical (e.g., possible awake hypercapnic hypoxemia) and mechanical (e.g., restricted dilator muscles) stimuli to initiate a respiratory arousal. Little was reported about how respiratory arousal presents in this distinct subgroup, how it relates to AHI, Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), body mass index (BMI), and oxygen saturation, and how a non-framework surgery may change it. Here, in 27 patients with very severe OSA, we show respiratory arousal index was correlated with each of AHI, mean oxyhemoglobin saturation of pulse oximetry (SpO2), mean desaturation, and desaturation index, but not in BMI or ESS. The mean (53.5 events/h) was higher than other reports with less severe OSAs in the literature. The respiratory arousal index can be reduced by about half (45.3%) after a non-framework multilevel surgery in these patients.