Talking Sleep

Comparing Hypoglossal Nerve Stimulators for OSA

Apr 10, 2026
David Kent, associate professor and sleep surgeon at Vanderbilt focused on upper airway neurophysiology and device treatments. He breaks down differences among hypoglossal nerve stimulators. Short takes cover bilateral versus unilateral designs, external rechargeable power and timing strategies, respiratory sensing and MRI tradeoffs, and evolving multi-target approaches.
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ADVICE

Use Multidisciplinary Evaluation For Candidate Selection

  • Use shared decision making with sleep and surgical experts for candidate selection.
  • Screen for moderate–severe OSA, CPAP intolerance, and absence of complete circumferential palatal collapse via DISE to predict likely response.
INSIGHT

Phasic Stimulation Limits Energy Use And Protects Nerves

  • Timing stimulation to end-expiration reduces required energy and avoids depolarization injury from continuous stimulation.
  • All devices use on-off cycles because continuous chronic stimulation can harm the nerve.
INSIGHT

Genio Uses Inductive Power Transfer Like Cochlear Implants

  • Genio's external activation chip transmits power across skin via inductive coupling similar to cochlear implants; internal implant receives and delegates stimulation parameters.
  • Primary control of amplitude, pulse width, and timing resides in the external component.
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