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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The association of
sleep apnea
with daytime hypersomnolence without obesity, and its potentially lethal cardiopulmonary sequelae, make it crucial that this condition be distinguished from narcolepsy. A patient with retrognathia who had been diagnosed as a narcoleptic for 15 years had the primary complaint of excessive daytime sleepiness. Sleep laboratory evaluation showed severe hypoxemia and a mean of 366 upper airway obstructions per night. The patient was treated with a tracheotomy; this resulted in relief of the sleep-related upper airway obstructions, hypoxemia, and hypersomnolence.
JAMA
1977 Apr 11
PMID:Retrognathia and sleep apnea. A life-threatening condition masquerading as narcolepsy. 57 59
A patient with hypersomnolence, micrognathia, and respiratory insufficiency had been treated eight years for narcolepsy.
Sleep apnea
because of upper airway obstruction was found, and a tracheostomy was performed. Following this the hypersomnolence and respiratory insufficiency resolved. This case emphasizes the importance of carefully evaluating the condition of patients complaining of hypersomnolence to detect those with intermittent upper airway obstruction occurring during sleep.
JAMA
1977 Jun 20
PMID:Hypersomnolence and intermittent upper airway obstruction. Occurrence caused by micrognathia. 57 27
The tongue-retaining device (TRD) was designed to increase the unobstructed dimension of the nasal breathing passage during sleep. Twenty male patients with diagnoses of
sleep apnea syndrome
, primarily of the obstructive type, confirmed by clinical polysomnography, were fitted with the device. The TRD holds the tongue in a forward position by negative pressure. Fourteen patients have been tested before and after this treatment, and ten of these have also completed two follow-up recordings four to six months after being trained in the use of this device. There was significantly improved sleep and significantly fewer and shorter apneic events on all nights when the device was worn. On the first night of wearing the TRD for a half night only, there was a significant reduction in the number of obstructive and central apneic episodes. The mean apnea plus hypopnea index while wearing the TRD is comparable with the rate reported for patients who have been treated surgically by either tracheostomy or by uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, although the tracheostomy group contained more severe cases.
JAMA
1982 Aug 13
PMID:The effects of a nonsurgical treatment for obstructive sleep apnea. The tongue-retaining device. 709 22
We studied 21 subjects, 13 of whom had the
sleep apnea
hypersomnolence syndrome associated with upper airway obstruction during sleep (SAHS-UAO) to determine if "saw-toothing" on the flow-volume loop was significantly associated with the phenomenon of airway occlusion during sleep. A "saw-tooth" pattern was present on the flow-volume loop in 11 of 13 subjects with SAHS-UAO. The presence of saw-toothing correlated with fluttering of tissue that was visualized in the upper airway via the fiberoptic bronchoscope. The specificity of the saw-tooth pattern for SAHS-UAO was 100%. Generalized obesity may indirectly influence the presence of saw-toothing due to deposition of what appeared to be adipose tissue in the pharyngeal walls. Although the number of subjects in this study is small, saw-toothing on the flow-volume loop appears to be an important aid in the diagnosis of SAHS-UAO.
JAMA
1981 Jun 19
PMID:The detection of sleep apnea in the awake patient. The 'saw-tooth' sign. 723 Apr 72
Tracheostomy resulted in dramatic and sustained improvement in the symptoms of 11 patients with upper airway
sleep apnea
. However, seven of eight patients who had a standard tracheostomy experienced tracheal granuloma or stomal stenosis. Tracheostomy was revised in five of these eight patients using cervical skin flaps. Three of the 11 patients had a skin flap tracheostomy as the original procedure. Only two of eight patients had tracheal complications after a skin flap procedure. Postoperative problems unrelated to the procedure included recurrent purulent bronchitis in four and psychosocial difficulties in ten. Permanent tracheostomy should be limited to patients with serious cardiopulmonary complications of upper airway
sleep apnea
. The cervical skin flap is the preferred procedure for long-term tracheostomy in these patients.
JAMA
PMID:Adverse effects of tracheostomy for sleep apnea. 724 81