Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a complex disorder characterized by a sleep-related collapse of the upper airway. The most likely candidate for the common pathway linking various abnormalities casually associated with OSAS (such as adenotonsillar hypertrophy, obesity, retro- or micrognathia, acromegaly, or more subtle structural anomalies) is an abnormally small upper airway lumen. Symptoms of OSAS that appear during sleep include snoring, abnormal motor activity, disturbed nocturnal sleep, a sensation of choking, heartburn, nocturia, nocturnal enuresis, and heavy sweating. Daytime waking symptoms are dominated by often profound sleepiness, which may secondarily be associated with automatic behavior, retrograde amnesia, hypnagogic hallucinations, personality changes, sexual difficulties, and headaches. Careful evaluation, both sleeping and waking, are essential to select appropriate treatment. Treatments include nasal continuous positive airway pressure, tracheostomy, weight loss, uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, mandibular advancement, and so forth.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. A review. 333 20

Seventy-eight workers, drawn from a population of 1502 presumably healthy working men who were interviewed about sleep habits and sleep disorders, underwent polygraphic recordings for at least 1 night. A significant association was found between the complaint of excessive daytime sleepiness and the incidence of sleep apnea. Workers with more than 10 apneas per hour of sleep complained significantly more about loud snoring, hypermotility in sleep, and frequent headaches. They had significantly more ENT findings and hypertension.
...
PMID:Incidence of sleep apnea in a presumably healthy working population: a significant relationship with excessive daytime sleepiness. 666 93

Over an 18 month period, 19 patients were referred for assessment of excessive daytime sleepiness and/or loud snoring. Respiratory studies during sleep were performed in 14 of these patients with additional features such as disturbed sleep, observed apnoea during sleep, morning headache, mental and personality changes, hypertension and cardiac failure. Nocturnal respiratory studies undertaken for periods of 4-8 hours confirmed a diagnosis of the Sleep Apnoea Syndrome in eight patients. In these patients apnoeas, lasting from 30-144 seconds, occurred frequently during sleep (from 35-291 episodes per patient). In one severely affected patient, tracheostomy abolished all symptoms. The use of conservative therapy such as weight loss, protriptyline or a neck collar, highlighted the inadequacies of current medical treatment. Awareness of the symptom complex and potential complications of the Sleep Apnoea Syndrome is important because the diagnosis may easily be missed if the patient presents with one or two isolated complaints.
...
PMID:The importance of suspecting sleep apnoea as a common cause of excessive daytime sleepiness: further experience from the diagnosis and management of 19 patients. 693 67

Primary care physicians have become increasingly reluctant to refer children for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (T and A) during the past years while antimicrobial therapy for pharyngotonsillitis and otitis media has become more common. Consequently, more children retain tonsils and adenoids throughout the childhood years. Airway compromise from adenotonsillar hypertrophy is reported in 11 cases-8 with insidious onset, 3 with acute onset. Typical symptoms occurring during sleep include snoring, snorting, enuresis and obstructive apnea. Daytime symptoms included hyponasal speech, oral respiration and morning cephalgia. Methods of assessing children with adenotonsillar hypertrophy and airway compromise included polysomnography and acoustic analysis of respiratory sounds. It appears that airway compromise from adenotonsillar hypertrophy is more common now that fewer children are undergoing T and A, is being more commonly recognized because of improved methods of assessment, or both.
...
PMID:Adenotonsillar hypertrophy and upper airway obstruction in evolutionary perspective. 708 27

A characteristic clinical picture has been attributed to enlarged adenoids. In order to investigate this concept the occurrence of certain signs and symptoms was compared in a series of children selected for adenoidectomy and in a series of normal children. Nasal obstruction, snoring and speech defect occurred more frequently in children having adenoidectomy. The symptoms of rhinorrhoea, cough and headache and the signs of mouth breathing and abnormality on anterior rhinoscopy occurred as frequently in normal children as in children having adenoidectomy.
...
PMID:The occurrence of adenoidal signs and symptoms in normal children. 723 62

A case of Chiari malformation type 1 with sign of upbeat nystagmus was reported. The patient was a 9-year-old girl who was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery with the chief complaints of snoring and headaches. The neurological examination on admission revealed a lower cranial nerve disturbance bilaterally and upbeat nystagmus in the primary ocular position that increased in amplitude upon gazing upward, and horizontal nystagmus on gazing laterally. The skull tomogram showed platybasia. The vertebral arteriogram and the pneumoencephalotomogram showed downward displacement of cerebellar tonsils to the level of C2. The patient received suboccipital craniectomy and C1, C2 laminectomy for decompression and the foramen of Majendie was opened. From the operative findings the diagnosis was confirmed as Chiari malformation type 1. In the first two postoperative weeks, the upbeat nystagmus as well as other symptoms was gradually improved. It was therefore considered that the responsible lesion of the upbeat nystagmus in this case might be in the lower brain stem or the inferior vermis due to mechanical compression or circulatory disturbance.
...
PMID:[A case of up-beat nystagmus associated with Chiari malformation type I (author's transl)]. 744 31

Four hundred forty-one subjects 34 to 69 yr of age were recruited from a random sample of the community. The sample was biased in favor of men, snorers, and subjects with subjective sleep complaints. They answered a questionnaire and were monitored in their homes for sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). This report concerns the presence of symptoms associated with the obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) syndrome in the subjects with SDB detected in this community sample. Most of the symptoms commonly recognized as occurring in OSA were associated with SDB in our sample: snoring that disturbed the sleep of other persons, reports of apnea, reports of gasping or choking sounds during sleep, and finding the bedclothes in disarray in the mornings had significant univariate associations with SDB. Nocturnal choking and morning headache were negatively associated with SDB. Excessive daytime somnolence (EDS) was reported by 41% of those with SDB, but it was also reported by 37% of snorers without SDB and by 37% of nonsnorers. We conclude that the symptoms seen in clinic patients with OSA also occur in subjects with SDB who have not presented for medical attention. Enumeration of these symptoms by questionnaire, however, is a poor test for OSA in the community. EDS was reported by a higher than expected proportion of subjects not affected by SDB, suggesting that causes of self-reported EDS other than SDB may be common.
...
PMID:A community study of snoring and sleep-disordered breathing. Symptoms. 763 30

Persons with sleep apnea syndromes experience 10 or more episodes per hour of sleep during which airflow ceases for more than 10 seconds. Sleep apnea syndromes are classified as obstructive, central or mixed: obstructive when the respiratory muscles continue to contract but airflow is not obtained, central when respiratory effort is not present, and mixed when elements of both obstructive and central apnea are present. Approximately 4 percent of adult men and 2 percent of adult women are believed to have these conditions. In addition to having symptoms such as snoring, headaches, depression, decreased libido and fatigue, patients with sleep apnea are at risk for a range of severe complications secondary to recurrent hypoxia and hypercapnia during sleep. Diagnosis may require an overnight polysomnogram in addition to the history, a physical examination and a laboratory assessment. Less cumbersome diagnostic modalities are being developed. Treatment options include weight reduction, change in sleeping position, avoidance of sedatives, use of continuous positive airway pressure and surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Adult sleep apnea syndromes. 765 25

Sleep-disturbed breathing, which includes apneas, hypopneas, and oxygen desaturations, occurs in asymptomatic individuals and increases with age. Obstructive apnea is the most frequent type of respiratory disturbance documented by polysomonography, the gold standard test for assessing sleep-disturbed breathing. Many of the prevalence studies done to date have had one or more methodological weaknesses, including selection biases, varying definitions of obstructive sleep apnea, failure to distinguish types of apneas, failure to control for confounding variables, and small sample size. Although there is consensus on the definitions of sleep-disturbed breathing, the appropriate number of apneas and hypopneas for diagnosing clinically significant obstructive sleep apnea is uncertain. While the cutoff of five or more apneas and hypopneas per hour is historically considered abnormal, the origins of this number are vague, and the longevity of those who have this value on polysomnography is not necessarily reduced. This is particularly true among those without symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, which include excessive daytime sleepiness, snoring, nocturnal awakenings, and morning headaches. Investigators should be careful to distinguish symptomatic study subjects from asymptomatic subjects, and to exclude central apneas in calculating their estimates. In addition, various studies have used different definitions of sleep apnea syndrome, making comparisons of point estimates difficult. It would be more appropriate for researchers to estimate morbidity and mortality indices with confidence intervals, using several different cutoff points. Subject selection in all studies should follow a two-stage sampling procedure. All subjects with symptoms compatible with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and a subsample of asymptomatic individuals should be studied with all-night polysomnography. If portable monitoring is used, the validity and reproducibility of this diagnostic method should be assessed. Subjects with significant comorbidity should be excluded from prevalence studies. Factors that clearly increase the risk of sleep-disturbed breathing and obstructive sleep apnea and its related symptoms include age, structural abnormalities of the upper airway, sedatives and alcohol, and probably family history. Although endocrine changes such as growth hormone, thyroid hormone, and progesterone deficiency also have been suggested as risk factors for exacerbating obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, there is minimal epidemiologic evidence to support this. Case-control studies are recommended to assess the relation of endocrine factors to obstructive sleep apnea syndrome in a rigorous fashion. A limited number of mortality studies have suggested decreased survival in persons with the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, possibly primarily due to vascular-related disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Epidemiology of obstructive sleep apnea. 771 77

It has long been known, that irregular, heavy snoring and daytime sleepiness are common features of acromegaly. Only recently has the high incidence (30-60%) and clinical relevance of the sleep apnoea underlying these symptoms been recognized. Both diseases have a group of common symptoms and prognostic features: Increased cardiovascular and respiratory mortality, elevated incidence of hypertension, daytime sleepiness, decreased vitality, headaches and depression. These are very prominent in sleep apnoea and often reversible under treatment. In acromegaly their etiology has been widely unexplained and they commonly persist even when human growth hormone (hGH) levels remain normal after operative treatment. We report on 2 patients presenting with excessive daytime sleepiness and severe obstructive sleep apnoea caused by acromegaly. Both had macroglossia and hypertrophy of hypopharyngeal tissues regressive after surgical therapy. The average hGH-levels were 20 and 31 ng/ml before and 3 and 1.7 ng/ml several months after operation respectively. Apnoea indices and minimal oxygen saturations (SO2) were 59/h and 55/h, and 60% and 58% initially and improved postoperatively to 40/h and 50/h, and 72% and 70%. Polysomnographic parameters were normalized by NCPAP-therapy pre- and postoperatively and daytime sleepiness improved dramatically. In one patient the NCPAP-pressure could be decreased postoperatively. Since patients with sleep apnoea have an increased perioperative risk of hypoxia and because transsphenoidal operation and postoperative nasal tamponade were performed, both patients were tracheostomized perioperatively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sleep apnoea in acromegaly--prevalence, pathogenesis and therapy. Report on two cases. 783 Dec 13


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>