Gene/Protein
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Guidelines for the medical therapy of obstructive sleep apnea are difficult to define precisely. While some elegant investigations have been completed, most study populations have been small. Also, the long-term effects of most forms of therapy are not known. Some patients will respond to a given form of therapy or combination of therapies while others will not. In most instances the responders cannot be recognized prior to the institution of therapy and a cycle of trial and error ensues. One of the best nonsurgical approaches appears to be weight loss, albeit unsuccessful in most cases. Almost all experts would agree, however, that in nonemergent situations weight loss should be strongly suggested. Nasal CPAP appears to be the single most promising device.
Protriptyline
may have a role, although in our opinion its true efficacy remains to be determined. Oxygen will probably serve more an adjunctive role in therapy, and medroxyprogesterone appears to be beneficial only in the treatment of the
obesity
-hypoventilation syndrome. A reasonable approach to the medical treatment of the obstructive sleep apnea patient should include, first, by history, physical examination, and appropriate laboratory testing, elimination of anatomically correctable, pharmacologic, or endocrinologic causes of OSA. If apnea length, degree of desaturation, cardiac arrhythmias, or levels of hypersomnolence are so severe as to be potentially life threatening, immediate tracheostomy is suggested. In specialized centers, nasal CPAP would be used. In less severely affected patients, medical management, as discussed above, should begin. We believe that in view of the lack of controlled trials demonstrating which form of therapy is best, the clinician must recommend therapy on the basis of local clinical experience and patient acceptance. Of fundamental importance is the need for serial reevaluation so that the impact of therapeutic failure can be minimized.
...
PMID:Medical therapy of obstructive sleep apnea. 286 88
From this review it is obvious that no one pharmacologic agent is universally useful in the treatment of OSA. However, as mentioned in the introductory remarks above, the expectation of beneficial results in a heterogenous population of patients with OSA by specific-acting pharmacologic agents may be somewhat irrational. In addition to this problem, studies performed to date are often not controlled and are usually investigations in small numbers of subjects. However, from the data produced it is apparent that OSA precipitated by endocrinologic problems will improve with hormone replacement. Medroxyprogesterone has been shown to be especially useful in patients with an
obesity
-hypoventilation component to their disease.
Protriptyline
may also be useful, but its usefulness is impaired by significant adverse effects. Most likely, both medroxyprogesterone and protriptyline would be more tolerable in female OSA patients, but unfortunately, most of the OSA patient groups studied to date have been composed exclusively of male subjects. Therefore, we do not know if these agents would be more effective and better tolerated in female patients with OSA. The roles of ACE inhibitors and buspirone are not yet established. Serotonin-active agents may be useful in some patients with OSA, but the characteristics of responders are not defined for appropriate patient selection. Much work remains ahead to identify effective pharmacologic agents for OSA. Once identified, these agents must be tested in representative patient groups with a double-blind, placebo-controlled study design in multicenter trials to test the value of these agents.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pharmacologic treatment of obstructive sleep apnea. 760 29