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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
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A variety of imaging techniques have been used to assess upper airway size and function in patients with OSA. Each technique has certain advantages and limitations. Many of the imaging techniques study awake and upright patients, whereas OSA typically occurs while the patient is asleep in the supine position. Upper airway imaging may identify specific upper airway abnormalities that cause OSA. Furthermore, the majority of patients with OSA have a narrow and more collapsible airway in the velopharynx. Upper airway occlusion during sleep usually starts in the velopharynx and extends caudally. Obesity results in both extrinsic upper airway narrowing and soft tissue enlargement. Upper airway edema may occur secondary to OSA and subsequently exacerbate the OSA by causing further upper airway narrowing. Upper airway imaging provides some insights into the mechanism of action of certain treatments and is increasingly used to help direct treatment. Weight loss reduces upper airway collapsibility. Nasal CPAP increases upper airway size and reduces upper airway edema. UPPP enlarges the oropharynx and reduces upper airway collapsibility. Patients with a narrow upper airway, particularly relative to tongue size, have a good response to UPPP.
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PMID:Upper airway imaging in relation to obstructive sleep apnea. 152 9

Intermittent mechanical ventilation via nasal CPAP mask was provided to 13 patients admitted to this institution for exacerbation of chronic respiratory failure. Ten suffered from COPD, two suffered from obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS), and one from severe hypothyroidism. All except one presented with dyspnea and hypercapnia due solely to progression of their underlying disease processes. Six of the patients with COPD and the patient with hypothyroidism responded to positive pressure ventilation by mask with improvements in blood gas values and clinical status. The remaining two patients with COPD and the two patients with OHS were unable to use the system. Four of the patients with COPD and chronic respiratory failure have been subsequently maintained on daily volume ventilation via nasal mask for about 20 months with persistent clinical and physiologic improvements. Application of volume ventilation through the nasal CPAP mask is a feasible strategy for providing long-term mechanical ventilation to selected patients with COPD and respiratory failure.
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PMID:Intermittent volume cycled mechanical ventilation via nasal mask in patients with respiratory failure due to COPD. 155 51

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

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.
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PMID:Medical therapy of obstructive sleep apnea. 286 88

Of 22 patients investigated for sleep disorders, habitual snoring and/or daytime hypersomnolence, 12(10 men) had obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). 3 OSAS were mild, 5 moderate and 4 severe. The leading symptoms were daytime hypersomnolence and habitual snoring. As risk factors we found retro-micrognathia in 2 patients, macroglossia secondary to acromegaly in 1, alcohol abuse in 7 and obesity in 6. Conservative measures improved the disorder subjectively in 6 patients. One patient had a relapse 6 months after uvulopalatopharyngoplasty. 4 patients were successfully treated by nasal CPAP. Other diagnoses were idiopathic alveolar hypoventilation (2), Cheyne-Stokes breathing secondary to low cardiac output (1), monosymptomatic narcolepsy (2), sleep disturbances secondary to depression (2), chronic benzodiazepine abuse (1) and chronic bronchitis without nocturnal hypoxemia (1). History, clinical observation and oxymetry make diagnosis possible in most cases of OSAS severe enough to require treatment. Polysomnography is time-consuming and should be reserved for selected cases.
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PMID:[Sleep-apnea syndrome. Elucidation, therapy and course]. 305 35

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a common problem in middle-aged men. It is a syndrome often associated with upper airway anatomical abnormalities, but where the sleep disorder, part of the syndrome, impairs local upper airway reflexes involved in appropriate air exchange during sleep. We now have many possible treatments. It is better to associate them in a step-by-step approach. This implies development of appropriate services able to follow OSAS patients regularly. The immediate goal is to assure normal ventilation during sleep and maintenance of normal blood gases. This is obtained by use of nasal CPAP or nasal IPPV, less mutilating than tracheostomy. Weight loss and behavioral modification programs will improve some of the associated features of obesity, alcoholic intake, and smoking often associated with and worsening the sleep-related breathing disorders. Finally, an appropriate evaluation of the upper airway abnormalities will allow surgical approaches that, as a second step, will lead to an appropriate reconstruction of the upper airway and will allow discontinuation of mechanical devices, with a subsequent return to normal life for the patient. To offer only one of these services or to limit oneself to a single therapeutic approach is a long-term disservice to OSAS patients.
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PMID:Treatment of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. A personal view based upon evaluation of over 4000 patients. 305 71

Restrictive lung disease patients exhibit a wide range of breathing and oxygenation abnormalities during sleep. The combination of degree of restriction, whether it is intrapulmonary or extrapulmonary, and confounding factors, such as obesity, age, and sex, will ultimately determine the degree of disturbed nocturnal physiology. The sleep literature is still sparse in most restrictive diseases. For patients with interstitial lung disease, the role of nocturnal oxygen in chronic established fibrosis, and also in acute alveolitis (e.g., farmer's lung, bird fancier's lung, etc.), has not been addressed. As fibrotic lung disease progresses, the degree of nocturnal desaturation and breathing dysrhythmias will progress. Changes in sleep architecture are likely related to the progression of the disease, but this is not known with certainty. Long-term evaluation of sleep and breathing in interstitial lung disease will give further insight into whether or not sleep changes are primary or secondary events. For kyphoscoliosis patients, again, we need more information on sleep as the thoracic deformity changes. In addition, the use of drugs (acetazolomide, medroxyprogesterone, and almitrine) and/or nasal CPAP to treat nocturnal desaturation needs to be assessed in a controlled fashion. In neuromuscular disease, the dynamics of gas exchange and sleep structure need to be defined in a larger group of patients. Factors such as degree of muscle weakness, degree of underlying lung diseases, and medications must be taken into consideration. Nocturnal hypoxemia may cause muscle weakness and fatigue, which in time, could cause more nocturnal hypoventilation and further hypoxemia. Supplemental nocturnal oxygen should be evaluated in this population.
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PMID:Sleep in restrictive lung disease. 331 24

Four boys aged 6-16 years with neurodevelopmental deficits were treated with CPAP for obstructive sleep apnoea. Their diagnoses were: Obesity with mild mental retardation, (2) attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, (3) epilepsy associated with left hemiparesis and (4) mild mental retardation due to fragile X syndrome. Previous therapeutic attempts, including adenotonsillectomy, amitriptyline and methylphenidate in our patients prior to CPAP treatment were unsuccessful. A follow-up period of 12-48 months demonstrated a number of clinical benefits such as improvement in sleep quality and daily arousal, and a decrease in the frequency of seizures and episodes of pneumonia. Polysomnographic studies indicated a significant improvement in sleep parameters such as apnoea frequency, awakenings, sleep efficiency and arterial oxygen saturation. Side effects were mild and readily alleviated. CPAP is a feasible therapeutic intervention in intractable obstructive sleep apnoea of childhood, even when associated with neurodevelopmental deficits.
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PMID:CPAP treatment of obstructive sleep apnoea and neurodevelopmental deficits. 754 99

Our study included 42 patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSAS) confirmed by polysomnography. In these patients we investigated the clinical manifestations, the results of the laboratory examinations, including polysomnography, ORL observations and tests of pulmonary function, as well as the therapeutic results. Our patients presented a serious set of symptoms which included excessive daytime sleepiness, snoring, obesity, craniofacial abnormalities, systemic hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, incapacity to work with precocious retirement, marital conflicts and high incidence of accidents, namely traffic accidents. An adequate treatment, mostly with nasal CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure), induced marked relief of the symptoms; some patients had an advantage in surgical treatment and weight reduction. OSAS is a frequent entity, affecting mostly male adults after the 5th decade. The lack of knowledge about this entity and the common social acceptance of some of its cardinal symptoms induces considerable delays in its diagnosis. The severity of the symptoms, the personal and social risks of excessive daytime sleepiness, the cardiocirculatory effects and the risk of sudden death during sleep justify an early diagnosis in order to prevent the severe evolution of the disease. Its complex physiopathology and multiple etiological factors justify a multidisciplinary approach.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea. Clinical and laboratory studies. 765 80

Our study included 42 patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSAS) confirmed by polysomnography. In these patients we investigated the clinical manifestations, the results of the laboratory examinations, including polysomnography, ORL observations and tests of pulmonary function, as well as the therapeutic results. Our patients presented a serious set of symptoms which included excessive daytime sleepiness, snoring, obesity, cranio-facial abnormalities, systemic hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, incapacity to work with precocious retirement, marital conflicts and high incidence of accidents, namely traffic accidents. An adequate treatment, mostly with nasal CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure), induced marked relief of the symptoms; some patients had an advantage in surgical treatment and weight reduction. OSAS is a frequent entity, affecting mostly male adults after the 5th decade. The lack of knowledge about this entity and the common social acceptance of some of its cardinal symptoms induces considerable delays in its diagnosis. The severity of the symptoms, the personal and social risks of excessive daytime sleepiness, the cardio-circulatory effects and the risk of sudden death during sleep justify an early diagnosis in order to prevent the severe evolution of the disease. Its complex physiopathology and multiple etiological factors justify a multidisciplinary approach.
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PMID:[Obstructive sleep apneas. A clinical and laboratory study]. 828 15


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