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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen therapy resistant hypertensive males and 16 responders to antihypertensive drug treatment, matched for age, gender and body mass index, were examined by means of Static Charge Sensitive Bed (SCSB) and oximetry for the presence of
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome (OSAS). In borderline cases, polysomnography was performed. The prevalence of OSAS among therapy resistant patients was 56%, as compared to 19% in the control group (p less than 0.05). This higher prevalence of OSAS in a weight-matched group of subjects with severe
hypertension
supports the notion of a causal connexion between
hypertension
and OSAS. In 10 OSAS patients and 10 hypertensives with normal respiration during sleep, ambulatory noninvasive monitoring (ABPM) of arterial pressure (AP) and heart rate (HR) was also performed. The OSAS patients had a higher nocturnal variability of HR, systolic blood pressure (both p less than 0.05), and diastolic blood pressure (p less than 0.01) in 8 half-hourly single ABPM measurements. Contrary to the non-OSAS subjects they also had a higher HR variability during sleep than they had in the waking state (p less than 0.05). For subjects less than 60 yrs a range/median value of greater than 0.32 for nocturnal diastolic pressure was found to predict OSAS with a sensitivity of 87.5% and a specificity of 100%. It is concluded that therapy-resistant male hypertensives have a high prevalence of OSAS. As this may be a deleterious combination, screening for OSAS is highly indicated in such patients. A high variability of HR and AP in nocturnal ABPM suggests OSAS.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome in male hypertensives, refractory to drug therapy. Nocturnal automatic blood pressure measurements--an aid to diagnosis? 176 Aug 87
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
was first described 200 years ago but the definition of the syndrome was only developed during the last ten years (snoring, apneas during the night, somnolence,
high blood pressure
, changes of personality). The frequency of the syndrome is not known exactly but the pathophysiology, the morbidity and the mortality associated with the syndrome is facilitating by application of a positive airway pressure (CPAP) at the nose. Good compliance and rapid improvement of the symptomatology with practically no complications make that CPAP is the first choice for the physician in 1991.
...
PMID:[Obstructive sleep apnea syndromes]. 177 93
We studied nocturnal and early morning variations in the concentration of plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in 17 men who habitually snored. The subjects had a mean age of 51.0 +/- 5.8 years, range 41-62 y with a mean body mass index (BMI) of 32.9 +/- 7.3 kg/m2. The concentration of plasma ANP was measured by radioimmunoassay of venous samples at 10 p.m., midnight, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. All night sleep recordings were conducted with the static charge sensitive bed to monitor body and breathing movements and a BIOX III Pulse Oximeter for the blood oxygen saturation level. Nine patients were defined as having the
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome (OSAS). No significant diurnal variation for ANP concentrations was detected. At 8 a.m. five OSAS patients and two others had ANP concentrations above normal (70 pg/ml). Neither mean oxygen saturation during the night nor arterial
hypertension
discriminated between the high and low ANP groups at 8 a.m. The best discriminators for a high concentration of ANP at 8 p.m. were marked obesity (BMI greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2), over 400 movements lasting less than five seconds, and over 30% of active sleep per night. In a multivariate regression analysis age, percentage of active sleep during the night, BMI and the median oxygen saturation level during the night explained 76.4% of the total variance of ANP at 8 a.m. In a similar analysis the median oxygen saturation level during the night and BMI both explained the variance of ANP significantly. The whole model explained 53.7% of the variance of the ANP concentrations at 6 a.m.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Atrial natriuretic peptide in habitual snorers. 182 3
Since the interaction between disorders of the respiratory coordination and cardiovascular or cardiopulmonary regulation is still largely unknown the intention of the present investigation is to point out the coincidence of cardiac arrhythmias, such as premature ventricular capture (PVC) beats and conduction blocks, with
obstructive sleep apnea
(
OSA
). For the first time a group of more than 300 patients with suspected
OSA
is examined concerning risk factors and frequent diagnoses as obesity,
hypertension
, coronary heart disease (CHD), heart insufficiency, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and daytime hypoxaemia. Summarizing the results of lung function test, blood gas analysis, strain-ECG, Holter-ECG and inductive plethysmography with oxygen partial pressure measurement by ambulatory work-up the following statements can be made: PVC beats occurring markedly during sleep give hints for
OSA
being the underlying cause, especially if the patients are young and overweight. Hypoxaemia increasing during the apnea episodes should be considered as one possible pathogenetic mechanism. Second- and third degree conduction blocks and sinus arrest coincident very often with
OSA
. They suggest to be life-limiting factors the more so since they often go along with CHD or heart insufficiency.
Systemic arterial hypertension
and overweight have the highest prevalence in
OSA
, signs for heart insufficiency and daytime hypoxaemia are also significantly more frequent than in non-
OSA
patients. We could find no hints for direct pathogenetic coherence between CHD and
OSA
or between COPD and
OSA
, nevertheless pronounced nocturnal changes in blood gases and intrathoracic hemodynamics have important influence on the cardiopulmonary and cardiovascular system, as partly illuminated in other more pathogenetic oriented studies by the present time.
...
PMID:[Cardiopulmonary risk factors in patients with sleep apnea]. 186 5
15 patients with
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome and arterial
hypertension
(H-OSAS), 25 normotensive patients with sleep apnea syndrome (N-OSAS) and 20 healthy age-matched controls (C) were included in this study. Ventilatory responses to activation (hypoxia) and inactivation (hyperoxia) of carotid chemoreceptors were studied in all subjects. Relationship between hypoxic ventilatory reactivity and nocturnal bradycardia during apnea-phases was analysed in both groups of patients. Results and conclusions. 1. We found an impairment of ventilatory response to hypoxia in H-
OSAS
and N-
OSAS
patients. However, the increase in ventilation in response to hypoxia was significantly greater in H-
OSAS
as compared to N-
OSAS
patients. 2. An augmented ventilatory response to inactivation of carotid chemoreceptors (the decrease in ventilation), observed in H-
OSAS
patients, indicates an increase in resting peripheral chemoreceptors drive in this group of patients. 3. The relationship between ventilatory response to hypoxia and nocturnal bradycaria in
obstructive sleep apnea
patients suggests, that hypoxic reactivity of arterial chemoreceptors might be involved in the origin of bradycardia during apnea events.
...
PMID:Peripheral chemoreceptor reflex in obstructive sleep apnea patients; a relationship between ventilatory response to hypoxia and nocturnal bradycardia during apnea events. 186 15
To determine if a history of snoring is a risk factor for brain infarction, I conducted a case-control study of risk factors for ischemic stroke using 177 consecutive male patients aged 16-60 (mean 49) years with acute brain infarction. For each patient I chose an age-matched (+/- 6 years) male control. Arterial
hypertension
, coronary heart disease, snoring (habitually or often), and heavy drinking (greater than 300 g/wk) were risk factors in the stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis. The odds ratio of snoring for brain infarction was 2.13. By McNemar's test this association increased strongly if a history of sleep apnea, excessive daytime sleepiness, and obesity were all present with snoring (odds ratio 8.00). My study indicates that snoring may be a risk factor for ischemic stroke, possibly because of the higher prevalence of an
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome among snorers than nonsnorers.
...
PMID:Snoring and the risk of ischemic brain infarction. 186 48
Echocardiograms were taken from the parasternal long axis view during nocturnal sleep in ten patients diagnosed with
OSAS
. A table designed to support the echocardiographic probe prevented significant sleep disturbances during monitoring and allowed continuous data collection with and without nasal CPAP administration. In five of ten patients, there was before CPAP treatment a diastolic LSIVS during NREM sleep, inducing a flattening of the left ventricle. Arterial blood pressure recordings showed pulsus paradoxus when LSIVS was occurring. Nasal CPAP led to normal, unobstructed breathing, significant decrease in Pes nadir and disappearance of LSIVS and pulsus paradoxus. Increase in left ventricular afterload and increase in total peripheral resistance could lead to hypertrophy and
hypertension
in some
OSAS
patients. The presence of pulsus paradoxus in
OSAS
indicates a marked increase in Pes nadir, and its disappearance with nasal CPAP may be one of the signs of effective treatment of
OSAS
.
...
PMID:Leftward shift of the interventricular septum and pulsus paradoxus in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. 191 3
A conservative surgical technique is proposed as an alternative to the classical uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) for the treatment of
obstructive sleep apnea
and snoring. The resection is strictly intrapalatine, and careful suturing in three planes seems to lead to complete disappearance of the often unbearable postoperative pain. The soft palate is shortened but nonetheless still resembles a normal soft palate. Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) was described by Ikematsu in 1952. This method has taken on a new lease of life in recent years. Its efficacy is generally accepted, and its use, especially in cases of
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome, is the only treatment of the palatal velum at present practiced. In addition to aesthetic problems, this method generally gives rise to complications in the shape of temporary--but sometimes considerable--pain, nasal regurgitation, and a nasal voice. In a small percentage of patients, some of these disorders may prove irreversible. In my series of eight patients, five were obese and presented with
hypertension
. Three of them also were suffering from
obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome. The three others were ordinary snorers who caused considerable inconvenience to sleeping partners.
...
PMID:Intrapalatine resection (IPR) in the treatment of sleep apnea and snoring. 199 17
The
obstructive sleep apnea
(
OSA
) syndrome has been considered to be a cause of both transient blood pressure elevations during sleep and sustained
hypertension
during the awake state. The purpose of this review was to examine critically the existing literature regarding (1) the blood pressure alterations associated with
OSA
, (2) causal mechanisms relating specific blood pressure alterations to
OSA
, and (3) potential consequences of the systemic circulatory abnormalities associated with
OSA
. Particular attention was directed at studies that assessed the prevalence of
OSA
in patients with
hypertension
and that examined the effects on blood pressure of treatment of
OSA
. We conclude that patients with
OSA
have abnormal sleep blood pressure patterns, manifested most frequently by apnea-associated blood pressure elevations. Confounding factors such as obesity and antihypertensive drug therapy, and conflicting evidence regarding changes in daytime blood pressure after therapy for
OSA
, make it premature to conclude that
OSA
and daytime
hypertension
are directly associated. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the blood pressure alterations that occur during sleep could contribute to the high cardiovascular morbidity in patients with
OSA
. Further research into the relationship between
OSA
and
hypertension
should improve the future care of patients with these conditions and enhance our understanding of cardiopulmonary pathophysiology.
...
PMID:Causes and consequences of blood pressure alterations in obstructive sleep apnea. 200 Nov 27
We examined the prevalence of daytime
hypertension
in a modern sample of patients with
obstructive sleep apnea
(
OSA
) and assessed the relative risk factors contributing to the development of
hypertension
in this disorder. Daytime
hypertension
was present in 92 (45 percent) of 206 male and female patients with
OSA
. Stepwise logistic regression revealed that only age and body mass index (BMI) were predictors of
hypertension
in this population. A subsample of 152 male patients with
OSA
was then compared to 904 men identified from a geographically and ethnically similar general population. When one controlled for age and BMI, the prevalence of
hypertension
in the two groups was the same except for those aged 25 to 44 years who were markedly obese (BMI greater than 31 kg/m2). In this group, 47 percent of the patients with
OSA
were hypertensive vs 26 percent of control subjects (p less than 0.05). Our data suggest that the high prevalence of
hypertension
in
OSA
is primarily related to age and the excess obesity seen in these patients. In morbidly obese young patients with
OSA
, factors directly related to
OSA
may also be contributing to the development of
hypertension
. With increasing age, other competitive risks may obscure any independent effect that
OSA
may exert.
...
PMID:Daytime hypertension in obstructive sleep apnea. Prevalence and contributing risk factors. 200 87
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