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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sleep-disordered breathing may occur in a wide variety of neuromuscular syndromes, and may present with diverse, often isolated, symptoms or findings such as excessive daytime sleepiness, pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, morning headaches, or hypoxia-induced nocturnal seizures. The authors report two sisters with congenital muscular dystrophy in whom central sleep apnoea resulted in the isolated symptom of nocturnal seizures in one, and morning headaches in the other. Review of the literature reveals that sleep-disordered breathing may be common in neuromuscular disorders, and may often be present when clinical weakness is mild, and insufficient to result in diurnal respiratory dysfunction.
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PMID:Central sleep apnoea in congenital muscular dystrophy. 194 Sep 43

In a Nigerian town with a stable population of 20,000, a door-to-door survey was conducted, using a questionnaire involving a complete census and a simple neurological evaluation which had previously showed a 95% sensitivity and an 80% specificity for detecting neurological disease. Positive responders were evaluated and categorised, using agreed criteria for diagnoses. Nearly 100% cooperation was obtained. Life prevalence ratio for at least one episode of headache was 51/1000. Crude point prevalence ratio for migrainous headache was 5.3/100, and peak age-specific ratio was in the first decade. Prevalence ratio for epilepsy was 533/100,000 and peak age-specific prevalence ratio occurred in the 5-14 years age groups. The prevalence ratio for peripheral nerve disorders was 268/100,000, and age-specific prevalence ratio for tropical neuropathy increased with age. Prevalence ratio for stroke was rather low at 58/100,000, but was probably due to the people's attitude to the disabled elderly and high mortality of stroke which showed annual mortality rate of 70/100,000 which increased with age to 1519/100,000 per year in the eighth decade. Crude prevalence ratios (cases per 100,000) for others are 112 for neurological complications (including sciatica) of spondylosis, 15 each for poliomyelitis, motor neurone disease, development speech disorders, 10 each for syncope, hereditary neuropathies. Parkinson's disease, benign essential tremor, primary cerebellar degeneration, cerebral palsy, mental retardation, organic psychosis (probable intracranial tumor) and 5 each for muscular dystrophy, pyomyositis, spina bifida occulta, alcohol dependence and cerebral malaria. The implications of the findings are important for development of community neurological services in the developing countries.
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PMID:Neurological disorders in Nigerian Africans: a community-based study. 303 73

Eight ambulant children aged 6-13 years, four with congenital myopathy, two with congenital muscular dystrophy and two with the rigid spine syndrome, presented with recurrent chest infections, morning headaches, shallow breathing at night, or respiratory failure. Polysomnography confirmed the presence of nocturnal hypoxaemia with oxygen saturation on average less than 90% for 49% of sleep and less than 80% for 19% of sleep accompanied with severe hypoventilation. Additionally there was sleep disturbance characterised by an increased number of wake epochs from deep sleep (in comparison to 10 non-hypoxaemic subjects). The severity of sleep hypoxaemia did not correlate with symptoms. Treatment with night time nasal ventilation was started and repeat polysomnography showed normal overnight oxygen saturation and a reduced number of wake epochs during deep sleep. It is important to be vigilant for sleep hypoventilation in these patients and sleep studies should be part of the routine respiratory evaluation. Treatment with nasal ventilation is effective in reversing the nocturnal respiratory failure without significant disturbance to life style.
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PMID:Sleep studies and supportive ventilatory treatment in patients with congenital muscle disorders. 878 21

Patients with neuromuscular disease may suffer from nocturnal respiratory failure despite normal daytime respiratory function. The physiological reduction in muscle tone during sleep may be life-threatening in a patient with impaired muscle strength. Nocturnal respiratory failure may occur in patients with the postpolio syndrome, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy, and muscular dystrophy. Diagnosis of obstructive, central and mixed apneas, hypopneas, and hypoventilation is best made using polysomnography. Therapeutic options include noninvasive ventilation such as continuous positive airway pressure, bilevel positive airway pressure, intermittent positive pressure ventilation and, rarely, tracheostomy, oxygen, or protriptyline. Evaluation by a sleep specialist should be initiated in any neuromuscular patient with nocturnal symptoms such as air hunger, intermittent snoring or breathing, orthopnea, cyanosis, restlessness, and insomnia. Daytime symptoms may include morning drowsiness, headaches and excessive daytime sleepiness. Polycythemia, hypertension, and signs of heart failure may also be seen. Effective treatment is available, and may improve the quality of life, and possibly increase survival.
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PMID:Nocturnal respiratory failure as an indication of noninvasive ventilation in the patient with neuromuscular disease. 967 Mar 10

Three patients had chronic respiratory disorders: a 42-year-old man with glycogenosis type II was tired, had headaches, poor pulmonary function values and, according to the arterial blood gas values, hypercapnia; a man aged 24 with Duchenne's muscular dystrophy had variable moderate dyspnoea with hypoxia and hypercapnia, and a man aged 64 years with an mitochondrial myopathy complained of dyspnoea and headache but had good blood gas values. The symptoms and abnormalities of the first patient were suppressed by nocturnal ventilatory support through a nasal mask system, the second preferred to refrain from ventilatory support and died a few weeks later and the symptoms of the third patient decreased without ventilatory support. Assessing a ventilatory disorder in patients with a neuromuscular disease is not always simple. Symptoms suggestive of nocturnal hypoventilation may occur in patients without respiratory insufficiency. It is also possible for patients with chronic respiratory insufficiency to be free of symptoms. Determinations of the arterial blood gas values are the most reliable method. Since normal daytime values do not exclude a nocturnal respiratory insufficiency, it is advisable in case of suspicion of nocturnal hypoventilation to measure the arterial blood gas values at night, as well. Nocturnal pulse oximetry does not always adequately reflect the degree of hypoventilation. In view of the positive effects of assisted respiration, adequate diagnostic examinations and early referral to a centre for home mechanical ventilation are advisable.
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PMID:[Mechanical ventilation in neuromuscular diseases: do not start too early, but certainly not too late]. 1096 72

Pediatric neurologic diseases are often associated with different kinds of sleep disruption (mainly insomnia, less frequently hypersomnia or parasomnias). Due to the key-role of sleep for development, the effort to ameliorate sleep patterns in these children could have important prognostic benefits. Study of sleep architecture and organization in neurologic disorders could lead to a better comprehension of the pathogenesis and a better treatment of the disorders. This article focuses on the following specific neurologic diseases: nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy and abnormal motor behaviors of epileptic origin, evaluating differential diagnosis with parasomnias; achondroplasia, confirming the crucial role of craniofacial deformity in determining sleep-disordered breathing; neuromuscular diseases, mainly Duchenne's muscular dystrophy and myotonic dystrophy; cerebral palsy, evaluating either the features of sleep architecture and the importance of the respiratory problems associated; headaches, confirming the strict relationships with sleep in terms of neurochemical and neurobehavioral substrates; and finally a review on the effectiveness of melatonin for sleep problems in children with neurologic syndromes and mental retardation, blindness, and epilepsy.
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PMID:Sleep disorders in children with neurologic diseases. 1176 88