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

This cross-sectional, multivariate study investigated associations between sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and putative risk factors in a heterogeneous group of 720 individuals over the age of 50 years studied during all-night in-lab polysomnography. Results indicated that: aged men were more likely to show impaired respiration during sleep than aged women; excessive daytime somnolence and parasomniac symptoms (snoring, gasping during sleep) were associated with SDB but insomnia was not; obesity accounted for more variance in SDB than age per se, implying that the prevalence of SDB in some elderly persons could be related to the deposition of body fat seen as individuals grow older. All four risk factors (age, sex, obesity, and symptomatic status) were statistically significant and independent predictors of impaired respiration in sleep in the elderly.
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PMID:Risk factors for sleep disordered breathing in heterogeneous geriatric populations. 380 55

Hypoxaemia during the rapid eye movement phase of sleep is common in older healthy normal subjects over 55 years of age; the sleep apnoea syndromes--such as obstructive sleep apnoea, where oro-nasal airflow ceases for more than 10 seconds on many separate occasions throughout the night, due to failure of contraction of the genio-glossus muscle; "blue and bloated" patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema, where profound nocturnal hypoxaemia is common in REM sleep, and is associated with further elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure; the overlap syndrome--where "blue and bloated" chronic bronchitis is associated with an obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome; and bronchial asthma, where hypoxaemia is associated with irregular breathing and possibly nocturnal bronchoconstriction. Although absolute recognition depends upon all night sleep studies, monitoring of ear oxygen saturation, breathing patterns, and EEG, the clinical features when awake can lead to suspicion of sleep hypoxaemia--as, for example, obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea with loud snoring and restlessness in sleep, hypoxaemia during wakefulness in the overlap syndrome, and nocturnal awakening with wheeze in bronchial asthma. Treatment depends on the cause, and may vary from weight loss and nasal continuous positive airway pressure in obstructive sleep apnoea, to nocturnal oxygen in "blue bloaters", a combination of these two in the overlap syndrome, and long acting bronchodilators such as slow release theophyllines in nocturnal asthma. Recognition and appropriate treatment of nocturnal hypoxaemia is an important new development in respiratory medicine.
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PMID:Breathing during sleep. 390 86

In a study conducted in four family practice units in Toronto, Canada, 2001 subjects reported on snoring and medical conditions in members of their households. For spouses the prevalence of snoring increased with age up to the seventh decade, with a higher prevalence of nearly 85% in husbands. For 11 medical problems an association existed between snoring, its frequency, and the presence of the condition. This association continued when the data were corrected for sex, age, and marital state. For hypertension both men and women who snored between the fifth and 10th decades had a twofold increase over non-snorers. The prevalence of heart disease and other conditions, except for diabetes and asthma, also increased in snorers in this age group. When corrected for smoking and obesity the association between snoring, hypertension, and heart disease persisted. These findings extend those of Lugaresi et al, and if they could be confirmed snoring as a risk factor for conditions other than sleep apnoea and sleep disorders might be considered. Methods of alleviating the acoustic annoyance of snoring may also provide direct medical benefits.
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PMID:Snoring as a risk factor for disease: an epidemiological survey. 392 56

The clinical course and characteristics of severe obstructive sleep apnea are described for 50 adults whose condition warranted recommendation for tracheostomy. All patients had a history of snoring, excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep attacks, nocturnal snorting and gasping sounds and observer-noted nocturnal breath cessations. Generally, these symptoms became manifest before age 40, their appearance tended to cluster together within only a few years and, invariably, they were chronic. Aside from snoring, excessive daytime sleepiness was on average often the first symptom and began at a mean age of 36 years. However, in half of the patients either hypertension or overweight preceded excessive daytime sleepiness by at least 1 year. Physicians in the office setting should suspect severe obstructive sleep apnea in patients who have loud snoring and either excessive daytime sleepiness, hypertension, or obesity. Further evidence of apnea can be obtained by determining the presence of the additional signs of loud nocturnal snorting and gasping sounds and nocturnal breath cessations.
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PMID:Severe obstructive sleep apnea--I: Onset, clinical course, and characteristics. 399 56

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.
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PMID:Clinical complications of obesity. 639 58

Disorders of breathing related to sleep are relatively newly recognized and less than fully understood. This review presents the terminology used to describe them, and describes the physiology of sleep and the control of ventilation, the pathophysiology of breathing disorders during sleep, their various clinical manifestations, current diagnostic techniques, and the treatment modalities available at present. Among the diagnostic approaches discussed are airway fluoroscopy during sleep, pneumography, and polysomnography. Approaches to medical and surgical management of these disorders are reviewed. Speculation regarding the underestimation of the prevalence of these disorders, the male predominance, and their relationship to snoring, coronary artery disease, and hypertension, which also show male predominance, are presented. Also suggested is a relationship of sleep apnea, obesity, and mental retardation in childhood-onset or congenital disorders such as Down's syndrome and Prader-Willi syndrome, and in other endocrine dysfunction diseases.
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PMID:Sleep-related breathing disorders. 702 76

Although flow-volume curves are valuable in detecting extrathoracic airway obstruction, their role in testing patients with sleep-disordered breathing is undefined. To determine whether patients with sleep-disordered breathing have abnormal flow-volume curves consistent with variable extrathoracic obstruction, 60 subjects referred with suspected sleep disorders prospectively underwent spirometry and assessment of flow-volume curves. These tests were interpreted independent of the outcome of polysomnography. Fourteen of 35 subjects (40%) with sleep-disordered breathing had abnormal flow-volume curves consistent with variable extrathoracic airway obstruction, and 2 of 25 (8%) with no breathing disorder had extrathoracic obstruction (p less than 0.02). The presence of extrathoracic airway obstruction in subjects with mixed or obstructive sleep apnea did not correlate with age, the presence of snoring, excessive daytime hypersomnolence, obesity, or the severity of sleep apnea. Abnormal flow-volume curves were found more frequently in women who had no obvious structural upper airway abnormality. Because of the high specificity (92%) of the flow-volume curve, the finding of extrathoracic obstruction in patients with a history consistent with sleep-disordered breathing substantially increases the likelihood that sleep apnea is present.
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PMID:Abnormal inspiratory flow-volume curves in patients with sleep-disordered breathing. 730 12

Improved case identification of children with upper airway obstruction during sleep should result if physicians are aware of such signs and symptoms as excessive daytime sleepiness, loud snoring, restless sleep, recurrent nocturnal enuresis, systemic and pulmonary hypertension, undergrowth or obesity, and cor pulmonale. Furthermore, partial airway obstruction during wakefulness may be a risk factor for the development of sleep apneas or hypopneas. In suspected cases, polysomnography is a useful method for confirming and quantitating the type (central, obstructive, or mixed) and extent of ventilatory disturbance during sleep and its functional significance (such as arterial oxyhemoglobin desaturation or cardiac arrhythmia). Other methods may be employed to yield similar data. There seem to be at least two groups of children reported in the literature, those in whom there is a specific surgically correctable lesion (such as adenotonsillar hypertrophy) versus those who eventually need tracheotomy because of collapse of upper airway musculature during sleep. In the latter group of children, it is necessary to hypothesize an additional defect in the CNS regulation of respiration during sleep. Further research is necessary to define the boundary between normal and abnormal breathing during sleep, and to understand more thoroughly the effects of intermittent hypoventilation on daytime functioning.
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PMID:Sleep disorders associated with upper airway obstruction in children. 731 58

The association of habitual snoring with cerebral ischaemia was studied, in a case control-study, in 133 patients aged 45-75 years (103 men and 30 women) and 133 controls matched for sex and age. Ischaemic stroke was confirmed by brain computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. History of risk factors, especially of snoring and sleeping habits was recorded with structured questionnaire during interview. Prevalence of habitual snoring significantly differs between patients with stroke and controls: 31/133 (23.3%) vs 11/133 (8.3%) (Odds ratio 3.4, 95% confidence interval 1.5 to 7.6, p < 0.001). Even after adjusting for matching variables and confounding risk factors (arterial hypertension, cardiac arrhythmia, and obesity), habitual snoring carries a significant risk factor for stroke (odds ratio: 2.9, 95% confidence interval 1.3 to 6.8 (p = 0.01)). The risk of ischaemic stroke was higher among older male patients with arterial hypertension who always snored. Habitual snoring was not significantly linked with sleep-related stroke nor with the pathophysiology of strokes. Inquiring about habitual snoring should become a routine practice, especially among older male patients with arterial hypertension, and specific preventive measures should be instituted at an earlier stage.
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PMID:Habitual snoring as a risk factor for brain infarction. 757 63

Platelet function and fibrinolytic activity was studied during rest and after ergometric exercise in 13 hypertensive or normotensive patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and in 10 sex- and weight-matched controls. All patients had undergone a complete polysomnography for the diagnosis of OSA. The controls did not undergo any sleep investigation but had no history of snoring or witnessed apneas during sleep. On antihypertensive drug wash-out, two of the patients were normotensive, whereas 11 had mild to moderate hypertension. Platelet aggregation measured by adenosine 5'-diphosphate- or adrenaline-induced aggregation, platelet factor-4 or beta-thromboglobulin did not differ between patients and controls. During exercise beta-thromboglobulin decreased significantly in both OSA patients and controls. Plasma tissue plasminogen activator activity was similar in OSA patients and controls and increased significantly in both groups after exercise. Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) was 18.4 +/- 3.6 IU/ml in OSA patients compared with 8.2 +/- 1.7 IU/ml in controls (p < 0.029) during rest, indicating decreased fibrinolytic activity. The difference between groups remained after exercise (p < 0.017). Blood pressure elevation was more common and body mass index (BMI) was higher in patients with OSA, but there was no direct relation between blood pressure level or BMI and PAI-1. Nevertheless, differences between groups were smaller when blood pressure and obesity were accounted for. It is concluded that patients with OSA may exhibit decreased fibrinolytic activity. Low fibrinolytic activity may represent a confounding pathophysiological mechanism behind the high incidence of myocardial infarction and stroke in patients with OSA.
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PMID:Platelet function and fibrinolytic activity in hypertensive and normotensive sleep apnea patients. 761 Mar 15


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