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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Snoring is a common disorder, and may be associated with obstructive sleep apnoea, although there is little published information on the incidence of apnoea in snorers. This study aimed to assess the upper airway and to relate the findings to sleep study data in a population of patients referred by their general practitioners with loud snoring. Each patient had a full history, weight and height measurements, nasal examination, rhinomanometry, peroral grading of the oropharyngeal features, and fibreoptic pharyngoscopy with a modified Muller manoeuvre, followed by a sleep study. The results in our group of 35 patients demonstrate a high incidence of obstructive sleep apnoea (46%). Factors which correlated well with apnoea were excessively loud snoring, a narrow oropharynx, and marked obesity; 94% of patients with one or more of these features had evidence of sleep apnoea.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnoea in adults presenting with snoring. 193 59

Arterial blood gas analysis was performed before and after 60 to 90 s of voluntary hyperventilation in 27 consecutive patients with occlusive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) and daytime hypercapnia. The percentage of fall in PaCO2 from baseline was examined in relationship to age, body mass index, sleep-disordered breathing indices, and pulmonary function variables. In 14 subjects without airflow obstruction, only one individual could not voluntarily hyperventilate into the normal range, whereas 6 of 13 subjects with airflow obstruction could not hyperventilate to eucapnia. The average percentage of fall in PaCO2 was 16 mm Hg (SEM = 1.3 mm Hg). The percentage of fall in PaCO2 correlated significantly with FEV1/FVC ratio (r = 0.47, p = 0.01) and with FEV1 (r = 0.5, p = 0.008). Although the baseline PaCO2 did not correlate with FEV1, the posthyperventilation PaCO2 did (r = 0.54, p = 0.003). Voluntary hyperventilation studies herein suggest a predominant role for impairment of ventilatory control in the maintenance of hypercapnia in OSA since a fall of PaCO2 into the normal range can usually be obtained. The correlation between the percentage of fall in PaCO2 and spirometric measures of respiratory mechanics, as well as the inability of some subjects to normalize the PaCO2 voluntarily suggests an added role for respiratory mechanical impairment in obesity hypoventilation.
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PMID:Voluntary hyperventilation in obesity hypoventilation. 193 91

The Prader-Willi syndrome is characterized by infantile hypotonia, early childhood obesity, mental deficiency, short stature, small hands and feet, and hypogonadism. Many patients also have hypersomnolence, experience daytime hypoventilation, and subsequently die prematurely of cardiorespiratory failure. Hypersomnolence and daytime hypoventilation are also common occurrences in the sleep apnea syndrome. For a better understanding of the relationship of sleep to the features of the Prader-Willi syndrome, we retrospectively reviewed five patients (two adults, one adolescent, and two children) with this syndrome who underwent polysomnography. All patients were obese; they had hypersomnolence and daytime hypoxemia, and they nored. In all patients, the apnea plus hypopnea index was less than 10 episodes per hour of sleep. During rapid eye movement sleep, nonapneic reductions in oxyhemoglobin saturation were detected in one adult and in one child. Despite the presence of morbid obesity and a history of snoring, patients with Prader-Willi syndrome seem to have only mild sleep-disordered breathing.
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PMID:Sleep and breathing in patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome. 194 44

To clarify the roles of lung function, nocturnal hypoxemia and obesity in the development of peripheral edema in patients with the sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (SAHS), 65 consecutive SAHS patients had diagnostic sleep studies and respiratory function testing. Eighteen patients (27%) had peripheral edema without other explanation. Their sleep apnea/hypopnea index was similar to those without edema, but they were more obese (p less than 0.01) and had worse lung function (p less than 0.01) and lower oxygen saturation (SaO2) awake (p less than 0.01). These 18 became more hypoxemic during sleep than predicted from their awake SaO2 (p less than 0.005). Eleven patients with edema had evidence of pulmonary hypertension on cardiac catheterization, chest radiograph, or electrocardiograph and could be weight matched to 11 SAHS patients without edema. Those with right heart failure were more hypoxic (p less than 0.01) when awake, desaturated more frequently during sleep (p less than 0.01), and had lower FEV1% predicted (p less than 0.01). Thus, extent of both daytime and nighttime hypoxemia are important in the development of right heart failure in patients with SAHS.
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PMID:Peripheral edema in the sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome. 194

One thousand and one men, aged 35-65 years, were identified from the age-sex register of one group general practice. Over four years 900 men were visited at home and asked questions about symptoms potentially related to sleep apnoea and snoring. Height, weight, neck circumference, resting arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2), and spirometric values were also determined. All night oximetry was then performed at home and the tracing analysed for the number of dips in SaO2 of more than 4%. Subjects with more than five dips of 4% SaO2 or more per hour were invited for sleep laboratory polysomnography. Seventeen per cent of the men admitted to snoring "often." Multiple linear regression techniques identified and ranked neck circumference (r2 = 7.2%), cigarette consumption (r2 = 3.4%), and nasal stuffiness (r2 = 2%) as the only significant independent predictors of snoring. Together these account for at least a sixfold variation in the likelihood of being an "often" snorer. Forty six subjects (5%) had greater than 4% SaO2 dip rates of over five an hour and 31 of these had full sleep studies. Three subjects had clinically obvious and severe symptomatic obstructive sleep apnoea, giving a prevalence of three per 1001 men (0.3%; 95% confidence interval 0.07-0.9%). Eighteen men had obstructive sleep apnoea only when supine and in 10 the cause of the SaO2 dipping on the original home tracing was not elucidated. The greater than 4% SaO2 dip rates correlated with the history of snoring. Multiple linear regression techniques identified and ranked neck circumference (r2 = 7.9%), alcohol consumption (r2 = 3.7%), age (r2 = 1%) and obesity (r2 = 1%) as the only significant independent predictors of the rate of overnight hypoxic dipping. This study shows that snoring in this randomly selected population correlates best with neck size, smoking, and nasal stuffiness. Obstructive sleep apnoea, defined by nocturnal hypoxaemia, correlates best with neck size and alcohol, and less so with age and general obesity.
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PMID:Predictors and prevalence of obstructive sleep apnoea and snoring in 1001 middle aged men. 201 7

This report describes the polysomnographic findings and the respiratory alterations during sleep in a 20-year-old patient with the Prader-Willi syndrome. Nocturnal recordings and a variant of the multiple sleep latency test showed excessive daytime sleepiness, sleep onset rapid eye movement episodes, snoring and sleep apnea. Treatment with nasal continuous positive airway pressure normalized the respiratory pattern and the sleep structure, except for rapid eye movement sleep onset. Whereas upper airway obstruction and obesity may explain the respiratory disorders, as shown by their resolution with continuous positive airway pressure treatment, hypothalamic dysfunction could play a role in the disruption of the normal nonrapid eye movement/rapid eye movement sleep periodicity.
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PMID:Sleep and breathing abnormalities in a case of Prader-Willi syndrome. The effects of acute continuous positive airway pressure treatment. 202 95

To examine if gender and airway resistance (nasal and pulmonary) influence the loudness and intensity of snoring, we prospectively studied 370 unselected patients referred to our sleep clinic because of heavy snoring and a possibility of sleep apnea. All patients had full nocturnal polysomnography, including measurements of snoring using a calibrated microphone-sound meter system, and determination of pulmonary (Raw) and nasal resistance (Rna). Snoring was quantified by reporting the number of snores per hour of sleep (snoring index--SI) and the maximum nocturnal sound intensity (dBmax). The patient population comprised 77 females and 293 males, ranging in age from 12 to 80 years. Based on the apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) we separated all patients into the apneic and non-apneic groups. There were 201 non-apneic snorers (AHI less than or equal to 10) and 160 apneic snorers (AHI greater than 10). There was no significant difference in snoring frequency, maximum nocturnal sound intensity, nasal and pulmonary resistance between men and women or between apneic and non-apneic snorers. Stepwise, forward, multiple linear regression analysis showed that body mass index and nasal resistance correlate significantly with the snoring index (R2 = 0.29, p less than 0.005), while age and body mass index correlate only weakly, but significantly, with the maximum nocturnal sound intensity. We conclude that (1) men snore similarly to women, and (2) obesity and nasal resistance are important determinants of the frequency of snoring. It follows that measures taken to reduce weight and decrease nasal resistance may be of benefit in reducing snoring.
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PMID:Snoring, apnea and nasal resistance in men and women. 203 May 40

The health risks of obesity increase with its severity and reach significance at a weight greater than 20% above optimal, by using life insurance tables, or at a body mass index greater than 27. Risks include hypertension, insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, hypertriglyceridemia, low high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, and, in some studies, high total-and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol. There is an increased mortality from endometrial cancer in women and from colorectal cancer in men. Chronic hypoxia and hypercapnia, sleep apnea, gout, and degenerative joint disease can occur with more severe obesity. The distribution of body fat is directly related to these health risks. Abdominal obesity is more dangerous than gluteal-femoral obesity because the amount of intraabdominal fat seems to determine much of the increased peril; therefore, risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke, hypertension, and diabetes increase with abdominal obesity, even independently of total fat mass.
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PMID:Health implications of obesity. 203 92

Obstructive sleep apnoea is a common disorder in western societies and has a strong association with obesity and alcohol use. The condition has not previously been recorded in Papua New Guinea. The clinical details of 2 patients from Papua New Guinea with obstructive sleep apnoea are described, and the principles of treatment of this condition are outlined. Sleep apnoea is likely to become an increasing problem in Papua New Guinea.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnoea: a new disease for Papua New Guinea? 208 Jun 74

The OSA syndrome, described over 100 years ago, was rediscovered in 1966. It is a common disorder, especially among fat, middle-aged men. Stentorian snoring and diurnal somnolence are the cardinal manifestations and should always lead to an examination during sleep. That examination (polysomnography) can demonstrate the pathognomonic events--repetitive apneas occurring in sleep--which signal the failure of the sleeping brain to maintain the patency of the supraglottic airway. All evidence points to the problem being an abnormal pharyngeal airway, one which has a shape or size or compliance that allows inspiratory collapse as the normal loss of pharyngeal dilator muscle tone occurs with sleep. The apneas are asphyxic events terminated by arousals which fragment sleep continuity and lead to the daytime sleepiness. Because the snoring occurs during sleep, the arousals are unremembered, and the sleepiness can develop so gradually that the patient may forget what normal alertness is like. It is important to interview the patient's spouse or partner. Besides obesity and maleness, other risk factors for OSA are diseases that have an impact on the configuration or effective compliance of the pharyngeal passageway. Recent studies support the clinical intuition that sleep apnea is undesirable. Sleepiness leads to accidents. The hypoxemia occurring during apnea can lead to potentially fatal cardiac dysrhythmias. A number of reports suggest that snoring and sleep apnea are associated with an increased risk of stroke, myocardial ischemia, and infarction. Finally, there are now two papers showing a significantly decreased probability of 5-year survival in patients with symptomatic sleep apnea. The good news is that treatment with tracheostomy or NCPAP improves mortality rates to normal. Approximately 90 per cent of patients can tolerate a night's initial trial with CPAP. Long-term acceptance of CPAP has now been reviewed in a number of studies, and it appears to be about 65 to 70 per cent.
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PMID:Sleep disorders and upper airway obstruction in adults. 219 4


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