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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 39-year-old man twice experienced ventricular fibrillation and exhibited numerous ventricular premature beats. Coronary arteries were normal, and no impaired cardiac function was found upon catheterization. Evidence was adduced that the ventricular premature beats were related to higher nervous activity. The patient had serious psychiatric problems; the ventricular premature beats were provoked by psychophysiologic stress, increased during REM sleep, were reduced by meditation, and were controlled by beta-adrenergic blockade, phenytoin and digitalization. We conclude that psychologic and neurophysiologic factors may predispose to life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia in the absence of organic heart disease. Effective management of the recurrent ventricular arrhythmia involved; acute drug testing for assessing antiarrhythmic efficacy; use of programmed trendscription to provide on-line information on drug action; a treatment program involving more than one agent; and use of measures to reduce sympathetic nervous activity.
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PMID:Basis for recurring ventricular fibrillation in the absence of coronary heart disease and its management. 17 92

Sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) is often associated with arrhythmias. The study was performed to clarify the characteristics and mechanisms of the heart rate (HR) changes during and after sleep induced apneas. Thirty-one patients with SAS without definitive heart disease, aged 17-78 years (mean 54.2 years), were examined by electroencephalograms, electrocardiograms, electrooculograms, nasal and oral breathing, thoracic and abdominal respiratory movements and arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2). [Results and Discussion] At the onset of sleep apnea, some showed progressive reductions in HR, followed by abrupt tachycardia on the resumption of breathing. Thirty-one patients with SAS were classified into three Groups (A, B, C). Group A demonstrated that HR changes occurred associated with apnea both in stage REM and in stage non-REM. Group B demonstrated that HR changes occurred associated with apnea only in stage REM. Group C demonstrated that HR changes did not occur associated with apnea. In Group A, apnea frequency and apnea index were higher than those of Group C. In Group A, the lowest SaO2 was lower than that of Group C, total time under 90% of arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) was longer than that of Group C. There was a good negative correlation between oxygen saturation and HR changes. Further, HR changes were augmented by arousal response. This might be related to the arousal response as well as to the cardiostimulatory effects of hypoxia associated with increased ventilation. The arousability in response to apneas might be important in HR changes. In SAS, the degree of HR changes was related to apnea frequency, apnea index, apnea length and sleep stage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Heart rate changes in sleep apnea syndrome]. 226 69

Snoring usually is trivial and unimportant, but it can turn into a social or medical problem. Obesity, hypertension and heart disease are more frequent among snorers than among nonsnorers, and especially snorers with hypersomnia during the day are at risk. Hypersomnia in association with snoring usually signifies obstructive sleep apnea. Increased resistance in the upper airways, together with negative inspiratory pharyngeal pressure and muscular hypotonia during deep non-REM and REM sleep, lead to collapse of the pharynx, hypoxia and hypercapnia. Only after arousal from sleep does muscle tone return, pharyngeal obstruction reopen and airflow resume. Since this process can occur 300 or 400 times a night, repetitive alveolar hypoventilation leads to pulmonary-arterial hypertension and cor pulmonale, and the repetitive sympathetic activations can cause systemic hypertension or serious cardiac arrhythmias. The countless arousals deprive the sufferer of deep non-REM and REM sleep and their consequence is sleep fragmentation. The symptoms are excessive daytime sleepiness, intellectual deterioration and personality and behavioral changes. Oronasomaxillofacial, endocrine and neuromuscular anomalies and diseases predispose to sleep apnea, and alcohol or CNS-depressant drugs can favour its occurrence. Diagnosis is made by nighttime oxymetry, and if this is abnormal, by polysomnography. After polysomnography it is possible to distinguish between obstructive and nonobstructive sleep apnea, and the decisions for an adequate treatment can be made.
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PMID:[Dangerous snoring. Sleep-apnea syndrome]. 331 92

The purpose of this report is to present the findings in a neonate with tetralogy of Fallot and a history of prolonged sleep-related apnea requiring resuscitation. At a baseline arterial oxygen pressure of 46 mm Hg, his preoperative responses to carbon dioxide during non-REM sleep (26.1 and 26.6 ml/kg/min/mm Hg of alveolar carbon dioxide tension [PACO2]) were identical to those reported in near-miss sudden infant death syndrome. Following a systemic-pulmonary arterial shunt, the arterial saturation reached 95 percent, and no further apnea occurred. The prompt normalization of the response to carbon dioxide following surgery (75.2 and 75.4 ml/kg/min/mm Hg of PACO2) indicates that, unlike infants with the sudden infant death syndrome, a low sensitivity to carbon dioxide in infants with cyanotic heart disease may be dependent on hypoxemia and, thus, reversible.
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PMID:Reversible central apnea in an infant with cyanotic heart disease. 735 86

A young asymptomatic male athlete came to our laboratory to be enrolled in a research protocol on physical fatigue. Routine clinical and cardiological evaluations including echocardiogram were in the normal range. Several consecutive cardiopulmonary tests showed a fairly good tolerance to exercise, with no symptoms even when the effort was abruptly arrested. On the other hand, Holter ECG recordings showed long nocturnal sinus pauses. As he was absolutely asymptomatic and free from any structural heart disease, he underwent a follow-up with repeated Holter monitorings for one year. During this period he decided on his own to stop practising sports; in spite of this sharp reduction in his overall physical activity, consecutive Holter monitorings showed that the sinus pauses were progressively increasing in duration (up to 9.2 seconds). With the hypothesis of a malignant vagotonia, he underwent a tilt test; however, we could not elicit any pauses or symptoms. The pauses grew longer over time; a endocavitary electrophysiologic test was performed, which showed no evidence of disease. To rule out the hypothesis of a sleep apnoea syndrome, he also underwent a polysomnography, including EEG, eye movement electromyography, arterial blood oxygen saturation and thoracic impedance: no alterations were detected with the exception of the sinus pauses, which appeared to be strictly linked to REM sleep, as suggested by the concurrent increase in rapid eye movements and desynchronized EEG. We hence made a diagnosis of sinus arrest during REM sleep (SAdRS), a very uncommon disease belonging to the parasomnias. Pauses were then quantified for one month by implanting a ECG loop recorder. As the patient became more and more upset and worried, and the pauses increased to nearly 12 seconds, we decided to implant a pacemaker, which is the only therapeutic option established in the literature for patients with SAdRS.
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PMID:Prolonged asystolia in a young athlete: a case of sinus arrest during REM sleep. 1534 35

Artificial Immune Recognition System (AIRS) classifier algorithm is robust and effective in medical dataset classification applications such as breast cancer, heart disease, diabetes diagnosis etc. In our previous work, we have proposed a new resource allocation mechanism called fuzzy resource allocation in AIRS algorithm both to improve the classification accuracy and to decrease the computation time in classification process. Here, AIRS and Fuzzy-AIRS classifier algorithms and one against all approach have been combined to increase the classification accuracy of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) that is an important disease that influences both the right and the left cardiac ventricle. The OSAS dataset consists of four classes including of normal (25 subjects), mild OSAS (AHI (Apnea and Hypoapnea Index) = 5-15 and 14 subjects), moderate OSAS (AHI < 15-30 and 18 subjects), and serious OSAS (AHI > 30 and 26 subjects). In the extracting of features that is characterized the OSAS disease, the clinical features obtained from Polysomnography used diagnostic tool for obstructive sleep apnea in patients clinically suspected of suffering from this disease have been used. The used clinical features are Arousals Index (ARI), Apnea and Hypoapnea Index (AHI), SaO2 minimum value in stage of REM, and Percent Sleep Time (PST) in stage of SaO2 intervals bigger than 89%. Even though AIRS and Fuzzy-AIRS classifiers have been used in the classifying multi-class problems, theirs classification performances are low in the case of multi-class classification problems. Therefore, we have used two classes in AIRS and Fuzzy-AIRS classifiers by means of one against all approach instead of four classes comprising the healthy subjects, mild OSAS, moderate OSAS, and serious OSAS. We have applied the AIRS, Fuzzy-AIRS, AIRS with one against all approach (Pairwise AIRS), and Fuzzy-AIRS with one against all approach (Pairwise Fuzzy-AIRS) to OSAS dataset. The obtained classification accuracies are 63.41%, 63.41%, 87.19%, and 84.14% using the above methods for 200 resources, respectively. These results show that the best method for diagnosis of OSAS is the combination of AIRS and one against all approach (Pairwise AIRS).
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PMID:A new approach to diagnosing of importance degree of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome: Pairwise AIRS and Fuzzy-AIRS classifiers. 1905 53

Australian Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islanders (ATSI) are noted to have a higher burden of chronic health conditions. However, there is a paucity of data on obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in this population. In this retrospective study, we evaluated the clinical and polysomnographic (PSG) characteristics of ATSI and non-ATSI adult patients who underwent diagnostic PSG between 2011 and 2015. There were a total of 3078 patients. Of the total, 403 (13%) were of ATSI origin. Among those of ATSI origin, 61% were male and 39% females, while among the non-ATSI cohort, 66% were males. The median age was 47.8 years in ATSI and 51.5 years in the non-ATSI cohort. In the combined cohort, body mass index was more than 30 kg/m2 (61%), hypertension (14.4%), diabetes (17.8%), and heart disease (23.3%). The ATSI patients had higher rates of class III obesity (27 vs. 15%), hypertension (26 vs. 14%), cardiac disease (34 vs. 23%), and diabetes (37 vs. 17%). Among all the study participants, the PSG confirmed 83.7% of the patients had an apnoea-hypopnea index (AHI) more than 5/h, mild (AHI 5-15/h) in 28.4%, moderate (AHI 15-30/h) in 22.3%, and severe (AHI > 30/h) in 33.0%. Among the ATSI patients, 46% had severe OSA. The median total AHI value was higher in the ATSI population (25, interquartile range [IQR]: 11-58) compared to the non-ATSI (17, IQR: 7-36), and in rural/remote population (19, IQR: 8-42) compared to urban (17, IQR: 7-37). This trend was similar for NREM (non-rapid eye movement)-AHI and REM (rapid eye movement)-AHI scores, although statistically significant difference was found only with ATSI status. In the combined cohort the probability of (OR = 1.62, 95% CI: 1.32-2.00, p < 0.001) of severe OSA was 62% higher in individual with hypertension, however, when stratified by ATSI status, the association was only significant in the non-ATSI population (OR = 1.53 95% CI: 1.21-1.94, p < 0.001). The odds of severe AHI was also significantly associated with heart disease (1.37; 95% CI: 1.14,1.63, p < 0.001), diabetes (1.74; 95% CI: 1.43,2.10; p < 0.001) and smoking (1.28; 95% CI: 1.09,1.50, p = 0.0023) in the overall study cohort. In both ATSI and non-ATSI patients, body mass index, neck circumference, sleep efficiency, wake after sleep onset, and respiratory arousal index were significantly higher and independently associated with severe AHI.
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PMID:Sleep apnoea among Australian Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal patients in the Northern Territory of Australia-a comparative study. 3160 97