Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Polysomnography was carried out in 11 adult outpatients with stable chronic heart failure (CHF) due to valvular heart disease in order to investigate respiratory abnormalities during sleep. The subjects consisted of 6 males and 5 females and their ages ranged from 54 to 76 years. A coexisting central dominant sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) was found in 4 males, 3 of whom had evidence of nasal obstruction. A successful mitral valve replacement in one patient with central dominant SAS was associated with a reduction in the frequency of sleep apnea. The results suggest complications caused by respiratory abnormalities during sleep are common and should be considered in the management of patients with CHF.
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PMID:Breathing abnormalities during sleep in patients with chronic heart failure. 263 19

Eleven patients with severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome, which was fully reversed by treatment with nasal continuous positive airways pressure, underwent uvulopalatopharyngoplasty. All patients were followed for at least 12 months after surgery. One patient with large tonsils was cured. Of the remaining 10 patients, two showed minimal objective improvement at 12 months and the rest were unchanged. Four patients subsequently developed cardiac failure due to obstructive sleep apnoea. Thus uvulopalatopharyngoplasty was not effective in these patients with severe idiopathic obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome.
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PMID:Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty in severe idiopathic obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. 265 12

During the last years, medical interest has focused on sleep related diseases, especially the sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and the nocturnal breathing abnormalities associated with broncho-pulmonary diseases. It now appears that SAS is far more prevalent than previously believed. In this review article we present the clinical features, the investigations and the current therapeutic methods. We also discuss the recent developments in our understanding of the SAS pathophysiology and their implications in the disease's management. Clinical importance of sleep related disorders of breathing is appreciated when one looks at some of the secondary effects including hypertension, angina pectoris, cardiac insufficiency and worsening of a broncho-pulmonary disease (hypoxemia, hypercapnia); these are associated with a high degree of morbidity. The recent advent of ambulatory screening systems allows an easier evaluation of patients at risk, such as obese or hypertensive snorers and patients with hypersomnolence; then the diagnostic polysomnographic studies can be reserved for subjects in whom home recording is abnormal. A precise and early diagnosis is important to allow the initiation of treatment such as Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) or naso-pharyngeal surgery.
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PMID:[The sleep apnea syndrome. A general review]. 265 45

Sleep apnea in children develops when airway obstruction at night is severe; however, lesser degrees of obstruction may also cause problems. The most common cause of nighttime obstruction with or without apnea is hyperplasia of the tonsils and adenoids. Other conditions such as craniofacial anomalies and neuromuscular disorders may predispose children to obstruction of the airway during sleep. Although cor pulmonale, heart failure, and cardiorespiratory arrest are the most dramatic results of obstructive apnea, before these occur many other problems may develop that are detrimental to the child's health, including failure to thrive. A careful history and physical examination are usually sufficient to determine if obstruction and apnea are present at night. Additional studies such as sleep sonography and polysomnography are helpful for documentation of the disorder. The treatment of obstructive apnea, unless associated with central apnea, is surgical. The vast majority of children with obstruction have dramatic resolution of their obstruction following a tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. Occasionally additional procedures including uvulopalatopharyngoplasty and tracheotomy are needed.
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PMID:Sleep apnea in children. 265 82

We studied five patients with chronic stable congestive heart failure (CHF), all of whom demonstrated recurrent apneas in association with Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) during sleep. All five patients had symptoms consistent with a sleep apnea syndrome. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP) was administered at 8 to 12.5 cm H2O to all patients during sleep. The number of apneas fell from (mean +/- SE) 60 +/- 12/h of sleep on the control night to 9 +/- 7/h of sleep (p less than 0.01) on the NCPAP night, whereas mean nocturnal SaO2 rose from 88 +/- 2% on the control night to 92 +/- 2% (p less than 0.025) while on NCPAP. This was associated with resolution of symptoms of sleep apnea. In addition, resting left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) as measured by radionuclide angiography (RNA) rose from 31 +/- 8% while off NCPAP to 38 +/- 10% (p less than 0.05) while on NCPAP. Furthermore, all five patients experienced marked improvement in symptoms of heart failure from functional classes III and IV (New York Heart Association Classification) prior to NCPAP therapy to class II after NCPAP therapy was instituted. We conclude that, in certain patients, CSR during sleep associated with chronic CHF constitutes a sleep apnea syndrome, which can be alleviated by NCPAP. In addition, NCPAP therapy may lead to a reduction in cardiac dyspnea and improvement in left ventricular function.
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PMID:Effect of nasal continuous positive airway pressure on sleep apnea in congestive heart failure. 269 Jul 5

It is well known that sleep apnea syndrome may develop or worsen in patients with cardiac failure. The case is reported of a patient with severe coronary artery disease involving three vessels but without symptoms or signs of cardiac failure. Aortocoronary bypass operation nevertheless eliminated the coexisting sleep apnea syndrome.
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PMID:[Remission of a sleep apnea syndrome following aortocoronary bypass surgery]. 279 33

Sleep related disorders of respiratory regulation can result, through various mechanisms, in impairment of the hemodynamics of the heart and the systemic and pulmonary circulations. The group of patients with sleep apnea has been most thoroughly investigated thus far. The patients frequently develop essential and/or pulmonary hypertension. In sleep all forms of cardiac arrhythmia may occur, and thus the patients are at high risk for nocturnal sudden cardiac death. Responsibility for most hemodynamic alterations is attributed to apnea-induced hypoxia and hypercapnia and the intrathoracic pressure fluctuations observed in obstructive apnea. However, we are still short of detailed knowledge regarding the individual pathologic mechanisms. The hemodynamic changes observed in patients with sleep related disorders of respiratory regulation lead in the long run to cardiac failure. Early diagnosis and care of these patients is therefore urgently necessary to render timely therapeutic action possible.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular diseases in nocturnal disorders of respiratory regulation]. 305 70

A patient with symptoms of sleep apnea syndrome had signs of congestive cardiac failure. A sleep study fulfilled the criteria for sleep apnea. Features of Cheyne-Stokes respiration coexisted. Management of the cardiac failure by weight loss principally due to diuretic use eliminated the symptoms of sleep apnea.
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PMID:Cardiac failure presenting as sleep apnea. Elimination of apnea following medical management of cardiac failure. 319 74

Sleep-induced narrowing of the upper airways underlies the widespread and supposedly trivial complaint of snoring, which may not only constitute a risk factor for the cardiocirculatory system, but in predisposed individuals may lead to the OSAS. The latter is a life-threatening condition characterized by repeated episodes of cessation of respiration at night with an associated drop in SaO2. Patients frequently present with hypersomnia, systemic and pulmonary hypertension, and even heart failure. HSD is the term we use to describe the evolutive stages from snoring to OSAS. ICAH, or Ondine's curse, is the clinical syndrome of sleep-related respiratory insufficiency in the absence of airway stenosis. We do not consider central sleep apnea to be an independent disorder. For the treatment of HSD, weight reduction should be attempted first. Also, if there are malformations in the upper airway, they should be surgically corrected. The use of various medications has been rather discouraging, and CPAP and other devices that are intended to overcome the obstruction are poorly tolerated by patients. The most effective surgical treatment for OSAS, even in progressed stages of the disease, is tracheostomy.
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PMID:Sleep-related respiratory disorders. 333 61

Primary alveolar hypoventilation is a rare syndrome of unknown origin, characterized by a dysfunction of the automatic respiratory pattern in spite of normal lungs and in the absence of mechanical ventilatory defects. A reduction of the ventilatory response to CO2 is regularly found, and cardiac failure is common. The differential diagnosis mainly concerns the sleep apnoea syndrome. The usual treatments have little effectiveness.
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PMID:[Primary alveolar hypoventilation. Clinical aspects and diagnostic problems. Apropos of a case]. 367 71


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