Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
...
PMID:Sleep and breathing abnormalities in a case of Prader-Willi syndrome. The effects of acute continuous positive airway pressure treatment. 202 95

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.
...
PMID:Sleep disorders and upper airway obstruction in adults. 219 4

Snoring was investigated in a survey of respiratory disease in Hispanic-Americans of a New Mexico community. A population-based sample of 1222 adults was studied with questionnaires and measurements of height, weight, and blood pressure. The age-adjusted prevalence of regular loud snoring was 27.8% in men and 15.3% in women. Snoring prevalence increased with age and obesity in both men and women. Cigarette smoking was also associated with snoring, but chronic obstructive lung disease and alcohol consumption were not. Snorers more frequently had hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and excessive daytime sleepiness. In contrast to other studies, after adjustment for confounding factors, there was no effect of snoring on hypertension (odds ratio, 1.0; 95% confidence interval, 0.7 to 1.5), but an effect on myocardial infarction was still demonstrable (odds ratio, 1.8; 95% confidence interval, 0.9 to 3.6). The association of snoring with sleepiness suggests that respiratory disturbance of sleep related to upper airway obstruction, such as sleep apnea, occurs more frequently in snorers in this population.
...
PMID:Snoring in a Hispanic-American population. Risk factors and association with hypertension and other morbidity. 231 Feb 78

Uvulopalatoplasty was performed (whether or not associated with tonsillectomy and/or septoplasty) in 1,222 cases of chronic rhonchopathy. Among them, 65 cases consisted of pre- and postoperatively registered sleep apnea syndrome. Clinical results were assessed on improvement of preoperative snoring, apneas, morning asthenia, daily sleepiness. Surgery was totally successful in 50% of cases, partially in 35%. Failure was encountered in 15% of cases. Failure or partial improvement are related to the preoperative presence of one or several of five particular risk factors: neck shortness, tongue hypertrophia, retrognathia, obesity and nasal pathology. Surgical complications were rare. Severe rhinolalia occurred in five cases: only three of them were sufficiently to accept plastic reconstruction which was successful.
...
PMID:[Clinical results of the surgical treatment of 1222 cases of chronic snoring]. 234 21

Sleep apnea syndrome is a condition characterized by recurrent interruption of breathing during sleep. Triad of symptoms for the disease are insomnia, daytime sleepiness and snoring. Recently, the patients complained of these symptoms have progressively increased. And so serious attention has been given to investigate the entity of this new clinical syndrome in medical and dental aspects. Three types of sleep apnea are classified; central, obstructive and mixed type. Most of patients identified this syndrome include obstructive or mixed types of sleep apnea. Obstructive sleep apnea has been presumed to have close relationships with obesity, micrognathia, retrognathia, tonsillary hypertrophy, tongue hypertrophy and so on. This study was designed to evaluate the characteristics of the dentofacial morphology in the obstructive, included mixed, sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) patients. The samples consisted of 25 adult male patients (average age of 48 years 2 months) with OSA as diagnosed by the division of respiratory disease, department of internal medicine, Kanazawa Medical University Hospital. One lateral radiographic cephalogram with the teeth in occlusion and the recording of somatic measurements, body weight and height, were obtained for each patient at visiting our orthodontic clinic. On the lateral cephalograms of whole samples, 10 angular and 6 linear measurements were carried out. Simultaneously, the body mass index (BMI) was assessed for each patient. Based on the cephalometric and somatometric measurements, the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea was discussed in association with the obesity and dentofacial morphology. Results were summarized as follows: 1. The body mass index (kg/m2) ranged between 21.0 to 45.7, with a mean value of 31.0 for OSA patients. Of whom, 3 patients were mildly obese (25 or more of BMI) and 12 patients severely obese (exceeding 30 of BMI). 2. Compared with normal control samples, the means of cephalometric variables of whole samples showed the tendency of micrognathia, large gonial angle, protruded maxilla and large cranial base. 3. By principal component analysis, it was revealed that the components for the shape and position of the mandible were of more importance in OSA patients than controls. 4. Discriminatory analysis clarified significant differences in dentofacial morphology between 12 obese and 13 non-obese patients. 5. The dentofacial morphology in non-obese patients were characterized by retrognathia, micrognathia, large gonial angle and small maxilla. In accordance with previous reports, the patients with OSA were presented the tendency of obesity and micrognathia. Furthermore it was revealed that particularly in non-obese OSA patients the morphological abnormalities might be the major contributor to the pathogenesis of sleep apnea.
...
PMID:[Dentofacial morphology of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome patients]. 264 Sep 22

International study of the effect of dexfenfluramine in obesity (ISIS): 6 months results. ISIS is a multicentre therapeutic trial of the "intention to treat" type organized to test the effectiveness and side-effects of dexfenfluramine combined with diet in the treatment of obesity. This was a randomized, double-blind drug versus placebo study programmed for a one-year period. Eight hundred and twenty-two obese patients were included. Dexfenfluramine was administered in doses of 15 mg b.d. The intermediate results after 6 months of treatment are presented. Significant differences were observed between the dexfenfluramine group (n = 404) and the placebo group (n = 418). In the treated group: 1) the drug withdrawal rate was lower, mainly due to a greater number of patients in the placebo group dissatisfied with their weight loss; 2) about twice as many patients achieved an important loss of weight in terms of percentage of the initial weight or overweight; 3) the cumulative loss of weight was greater; 4) there was a higher incidence of transient side-effects, such as fatigue, diarrhoea, dry mouth, polyuria and drowsiness. These results suggest that dexfenfluramine will be suitable for a more prolonged treatment of obese patients, in addition to diet.
...
PMID:[International study of the effect of dexfenfluramine in obesity (ISIS): 6 months' results]. 266 89

Napoleon would sleep very little. He frequently woke up during night and worked. Brief sleeping time in day repaired his fatigue. He had also a short and thick neck. In the last fourth of his life he progressively suffered from obesity, daily involuntary sleepiness and his intellectual capabilities undoubtedly decreased. Our experience of 48 cases of sleep apnea syndrome diagnosed by mean of polysomnography allow no to think that Napoleon suffered from this disease. Historical consequences of this pathology is discussed.
...
PMID:[Did Napoleon suffer from sleep apnea syndrome?]. 304 29

In December 1986 a 30-month-old female child with morbid obesity and respiratory failure was admitted to the Izaak Walton Killam Hospital for Children in Halifax. The etiology of the obesity was found to be dietary in origin after ruling out genetic, neurological and metabolic causes. This patient exhibited somnolence and cyanosis in association with hypercapnia and right ventricular overload. Her respiratory failure in the presence of a normal upper airway required ventilatory support, first with nasal endotracheal intubation, and then, tracheotomy. Weight reduction normalized her capillary blood gases and her somnolence disappeared. Subglottic stenosis hampered removal of the tracheotomy tube until 9 months after admission. The pathogenesis and management of obese hypoventilation syndrome are reviewed by the authors.
...
PMID:Obese hypoventilation syndrome of early childhood requiring ventilatory support. 306 Apr 36

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

Sleep apnoea syndromes are a frequent disease, with an incidence of more than 1% in the adult population, a strong male predominance, and a maximal frequency between 40 and 60 years. Their clinical manifestations are dominated by snoring and daytime sleepiness, at times associated with morning headaches, intellectual deficiency, sexual impotence. Obesity, hypertension and polycythemia are not uncommon. These patients are at risk for accidents due to sleepiness, sudden death due to sleep apnoea-related cardiac arrhythmias, ischemic attacks related to hypertension and polycythemia and right heart failure secondary to pulmonary hypertension and alveolar hypoventilation. The most frequent form of sleep apnoea syndromes include obstructive and mixed apnoeas. Their mechanism involves both anatomic factors (upper airway narrowing) and functional factors (defective activation of upper airways dilatory muscles) which lead to upper airway occlusion upon inspiration during sleep. Two therapeutic strategies are possible: a surgical one, uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, the efficacy of which is inconstant and unpredictable and nasal continuous positive airway pressure, which is constantly efficacious but constraining. Central sleep apnoea syndromes are rare, less clearly defined and more difficult to treat.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea syndromes in adults]. 332 Dec 51


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>