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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Factors related to risk of perioperative pulmonary complications include site of incision, obstructive lung disease, prolonged anesthesia time, smoking history with productive cough, and
obesity
.
Hypercapnia
is a consistent indicator of high risk. There is no difference between spinal and general anesthesia with regard to risk of pulmonary complications. In patients being evaluated for lung resection, high-risk indicators include predicted postoperative forced expiratory volume in one second of less than 1000 mL,
hypercapnia
, severe dyspnea on exertion, or advanced age when it is associated with advanced cardiopulmonary disease. Newer methods of assessing cardiopulmonary reserve may prove useful in identifying which patients with one or more of these risk factors are suitable operative candidates. Prevention of postoperative complications in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients should begin in the preoperative period with discontinuation of smoking at least eight weeks before surgery and vigorous pulmonary toilet in the 48 to 72 hours before surgery. Prophylactic lung expansion maneuvers can be effective in decreasing the incidence of postoperative atelectasis in high-risk patients undergoing high-risk operations.
...
PMID:Preoperative pulmonary evaluation. 233 Nov 91
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
To assess the relative contributions of age, gender,
obesity
, pulmonary function, and the severity of sleep-induced respiratory abnormalities to the development of alveolar hypoventilation in patients with occlusive sleep apnea syndrome, prospective data from III patients with occlusive sleep apnea were analyzed by stepwise logistic and multiple regression techniques. The significant variables in a logistic regression model predicting the presence of
hypercapnia
were daytime arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2; p less than 0.0001) and gender (p less than 0.04), the latter reflecting the higher number of hypercapnic women in our patient population. Multiple regression analysis performed in the hypercapnic group to study the determinants of the severity of elevation of arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) revealed significant contribution from the PaO2, the apnea-plus-hypopnea index (AHI), and the percent predicted forced vital capacity (r2 = 0.56; p less than 0.0001), whereas in the normocapnic patients, PaCO2 related to PaO2 only. These results suggest that daytime hypoxemia, mechanical impairment of the respiratory system due to
obesity
or obstructive airway disease (or both), and the severity of sleep-induced respiratory abnormalities as assessed by AHI contribute to the severity of
carbon dioxide retention
in patients with occlusive sleep apnea in a multifactorial fashion.
...
PMID:Determinants of hypercapnia in occlusive sleep apnea syndrome. 311 99
Snoring (inspiratory noise related to narrowing of the upper airways) and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are two aspects of the same basic disorder: sleep-related narrowing of the upper airways. Patients with OSA have been heavy snorers for years and even decades. Lying supine induces snoring and mild OSA in heavy snorers due to hypotonia of pharyngeal dilator muscles, decreasing waking neural drive and recumbent position, which contribute to functional narrowing of the upper airways. Functional factors in obstruction during sleep include (a) respiratory instability prevalent in the male sex, (b) increased extensibility of the lax tissues surrounding the oro-pharynx and (c) deficient contraction of the pharyngeal dilator muscles during inspiration. These effects are worsened by sleep deprivation and fragmentation, alcohol intake and sedatives. Anatomical factors favoring narrowing of the upper airways in snorers and OSA patients are (a) abnormally narrow airways as well as (b) increased thickness and length of the velum palatinum in snorers and OSA patients, (c) tonsillar and adenoid hypertrophy, micro- and retrognathia, and nasal insufficiency, (d)
obesity
with fat infiltration of the soft tissues and in particular of the oropharynx, (e) relatively open mandibular angle, hypertrophy and thickness of the tongue, and lowered hyoid bone (as shown by MRI imaging). It is possible that many anatomical abnormalities may be the consequence of snoring and obstructive apnea. During NREM sleep the ineffective inspiratory efforts progressively increase with worsening hypoxia and
hypercapnia
. The upper airways become patent again when arousal induces phasic activation of the dilator pharyngeal muscles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathogenic aspects of snoring and obstructive apnea syndrome. 318 70
Sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) is a rare disorder which is being diagnosed more often with increasing knowledge among physicians and patients. SAS presents with daytime hypersomnolence, intellectual deterioration and personality changes, chiefly in obese men, and is caused by intermittent upper airway obstruction during sleep at the level of the mesopharynx. Consecutive repetitive apneas of more than 10 seconds' duration are immediately abolished by pneumatic splinting with continuous positive pressure of 5 to 15 cm H2O with a nasal mask (nCPAP). A case report on a 31-year-old man with
obesity
and
hypercapnia
demonstrates that, although nCPAP by itself does not lead to weight reduction, it is more acceptable than surgical therapy (tracheostomy or uvulopalatopharyngoplasty).
...
PMID:[Continuous nasal positive pressure respiration (nCPAP) as a therapeutic possibility in the sleep apnea syndrome]. 327 74
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
The relationship between low-awake chemosensitivity, exogenous respiratory load (
obesity
) and respiratory/oxygenation patterns during sleep was evaluated in a family with overall low ventilatory responses to hypoxia and
hypercapnia
. Six family members were of normal weight, in good health and had normal pulmonary function tests. Only one of these subjects had totally normal responses to the chemical control of breathing. A seventh family member had loaded breathing because of severe
obesity
. His ventilatory and mouth occlusion pressure responses to hypoxia or
hypercapnia
were severely blunted. After weight loss (200 percent of ideal body weight to 133 percent) the ventilatory responses were improved but still abnormally low. Significant nocturnal respiratory abnormalities and oxygen desaturation were only seen in the overweight member and improved following weight loss (load reduction).
...
PMID:The effects of weight and chemosensitivity on respiratory sleep abnormalities: a family study. 377 Oct 93
The etiology of the
obesity
-hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) is unknown. Recent reports that treatment of obstructive sleep apnea with nasal continuous positive-airway pressure eliminates the manifestations of OHS suggests that obstructive sleep apnea may contribute to OHS. The purpose of this study was to determine whether hypoxemia during sleep was more severe in patients with OHS than in those without OHS. In our sleep laboratory, we studied 32 subjects with a ratio of the forced expiratory volume in one second over the forced vital capacity (FEV1/FVC) greater than 0.73 and no neuromuscular disease. Seven subjects had OHS characterized by
obesity
and daytime
hypercapnia
, and 25 subjects did not. The seven patients with OHS all had sleep apnea. Of the 25 without OHS, 23 had sleep apnea. Subjects with OHS had significantly greater oxyhemoglobin desaturation during sleep than subjects without OHS, even when subjects with and without OHS were matched for sex and weight. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that severe sleep apnea is a contributing cause of OHS.
...
PMID:Oxyhemoglobin saturation during sleep in subjects with and without the obesity-hypoventilation syndrome. 400 62
DIAPHRAGM ACTIVITY DURING CARBON DIOXIDE BREATHING AND TOTAL CHEST COMPLIANCE DURING DIAPHRAGM RELAXATION WERE MEASURED IN EIGHT
OBESE
SUBJECTS: four with normal blood gases and four with
hypercapnia
and hypoxemia. Whereas there were no significant differences in the values of total chest compliance between the two groups, there were marked differences in diaphragm activity. The increase in integrated electrical activity in the diaphragm, per millimeter increment in carbon dioxide tension in the arterial blood, averaged 66 units (range: 48-90) in the obese-normal subjects and 17 units (range: 12-22) in the obese-hypoventilation subjects. These results suggest that an incapacity to increase the activity in the respiratory muscles, to levels necessary to overcome the load caused by
obesity
, plays a major role in the genesis of respiratory failure in obese subjects.
...
PMID:Diaphragm activity in obesity. 582 73
The development of important respiratory disorders and significant hypertension in association with increasing body weight is not widely recognized. Altered respiratory function results from a combination of mechanical impedance to breathing exerted by thoracic and abdominal fat and a ventilation-perfusion mismatch. Sleep-disordered breathing with periods of hypoventilation, with or without apnoeic episodes, may commonly occur in patients with extreme
obesity
. Nocturnal
hypercapnia
and hypoxia in such patients may lead to a decrease in ventilatory drive, abnormal central respiratory control and possibly, in time, the development of the obese-hypoventilation syndrome. Respiratory abnormalities should be suspected in obese patients with a history of restlessness at night, loud snoring and daytime somnolence. Treatment is substantial weight reduction, but short-term measures include the use of compressed air via nasal cannulae for obstructive apnoea, and drugs which alter sleep pattern or stimulate respiration. The alterations in endocrine function, which accompany weight gain, may contribute to an increase in blood pressure and there appears to be a relationship between plasma insulin and catecholamine concentrations, fat cell size and the development of hypertension. The confirmation of a raised blood pressure requires that readings be taken with an adequately sized arm-cuff. In many instances endocrine function becomes normal with weight loss, and there is a corresponding decrease in blood pressure. The ideal management for an obese hypertensive patient is the combination of a suitable calorie-restricted diet with a programme of physical exercise.
...
PMID:Clinical complications of obesity. 639 58
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