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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:[Dangerous snoring. Sleep-apnea syndrome]. 331 92
Five patients were examined suffering from bilateral paramedian thalamic infarction, caused by occlusion of the posterior paramedian thalamo-subthalamic arteries, when they begin from one single pedicle. All cases began with obnubilation or transitory coma, followed by
hypersomnia
. Four patients showed vertical gaze paralysis, and the fifth vertical nystagmus. In three cases, nuclear lesion of the III cranial nerve was observed along with alteration of the photomotor reflexes, and there was miosis in one case. All were suffering from weakness in one or another limb or facial paresis and generalised acute
hypotonia
: only one patient had hemihypostesia. All five had dysarthria, ataxy and dysmetria, one had asterixis and two spasmodic crying. Between 5 and 12 months later, one had akinetic mutism and vertical gaze paralysis as the most noteworthy signs. The neuroradiological images show a bilateral ischemic lesion in the paramedian thalamic region, which extends in some cases to the anterior nucleus and in one case to the pulvinars; the lesion continues through the subthalamic regions and the medial part of the mesencephalic tegmentum, with a clear extension to the medial region of the cerebral peduncles in three cases and to the tectum in one case.
...
PMID:[Paramedian bithalamic infarct syndrome: report of five new cases]. 749 75
A 9 1/2-year-old Taiwanese boy with Prader-Willi syndrome had the following characteristics: difficulties with sucking, feeding and
hypotonia
during infancy, a dysmorphic face (triangular mouth, high arched palate, almond-shaped eyes and large head circumference with a relatively narrow bifrontal diameter), borderline intelligence, hypogonadism, hyperphagia, skin picking and truncal obesity. The boy experienced two
hypersomnia
episodes, at age 8 and 9 years, with both episodes lasting for 10 days. During the two episodes, he was found to have an exacerbated case of hyperphagia, pica, poor emotional control, stereotyped speech and agitated behavior upon awakening. After each episode, the boy had complete remission. Our findings show that the two episodes are compatible with Kleine-Levin syndrome. The relationship between the two syndromes, the Prader-Willi syndrome and the Kleine-Levin syndrome, deserves further study.
...
PMID:Kleine-Levin syndrome in a boy with Prader-Willi syndrome. 865 Apr 57
Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a genetic disorder characterized by
hypotonia
, mental retardation or learning disability, hyperphagia and compulsive eating due to hypothalamic dysfunction. Obesity is a major cause of increased morbidity and mortality among patients with PWS. Gastric restrictive surgery has been associated with partial breakdown of the staple-line in PWS. We report two patients with PWS associated with morbid obesity and obstructive sleep apnea who underwent biliopancreatic diversion (BPD). A 27-year-old male with BMI 52 kg/m(2) and a 20 year-old female with BMI 64 kg/m(2) underwent BPD. No perioperative complications were observed. After BPD, the male's BMI was 36.7 kg/m(2) at 12 months and the female's BMI was 48.4 kg/m(2) at 28 months, with excess weight loss 58% and 48%, respectively. They developed loose stools associated with eating. These patients have shown a considerable improvement in
hypersomnia
and respiratory difficulties. BPD proved to be an effective approach to weight loss in PWS, resulting in improvement of sleep apnea, behavior problems and quality of life.
...
PMID:Results of biliopancreatic diversion in two patients with Prader-Willi syndrome. 1597 69