Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute upper airway obstruction (U.A.O.) in adults is not as common as in children. The most common cause is choking on food, and associated endocrine disorders are among the rarest causes.
Airway obstruction
in adults has a variety of symptom-complexes, which manifest themselves as acute or chronic (incomplete) conditions, or only during sleep (
sleep apnoea
syndrome). There is an overlap between these symptoms and their aetiologies. A case of acute U.A.O. at the pharyngeal level in a hypothyroid patient is presented. Following airway relief and supplemental thyroxin treatment, the patient became asymptomatic during the daytime, but showed a severe form of
sleep apnoea
syndrome which required further surgical treatment to reach full cure.
...
PMID:Acute upper airway obstruction due to myxoedema and upper airway abnormalities. 341 30
Pharyngeal flaps are often used to correct velopharyngeal insufficiency. They produce a permanent partial obstruction of the velopharyngeal space.
Respiratory obstruction
and obstructive sleep apnea have been reported following this surgery. We undertook a study to find out the incidence of
sleep apnea
associated with pharyngeal flap surgery. Forty-one children (aged 2 to 22 years) admitted for a pharyngeal flap underwent a polysomnographic recording prior to their surgery. One child with Steinert's disease showed some episodes of obstructive apnea, and the surgery was canceled. Forty children underwent pharyngeal flap surgery, and polysomnography with continuous arterial saturation was repeated following surgery. Postoperative polysomnograms were normal in 26 patients (65 percent) and abnormal in 14 patients (35 percent). Among the 14 abnormal patients, we found 6 with obstructive apneas, 6 with central apneas, and 2 with both central and obstructive apneas. Ten of the 14 abnormal patients were restudied in the following months. Eight children had normal recordings, while 2 had central apneas. The 4 patients who declined a follow-up recording had no clinical symptoms of respiratory difficulty when sleeping. Of the 2 children with abnormal recordings on long-term follow-up, 1 is asymptomatic, while the second has persistent snoring, nocturnal awakening, sweating, and daytime lethargy. A section of his flap has been recommended. Independent analysis of arterial oxygen saturation revealed that the percentage of time with a saturation of less than 90 percent identifies patients with clinically significant apneas. Our data show that significant sleep apneas following pharyngeal flaps may not be as frequent or permanent as previously reported.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sleep apnea following a pharyngeal flap: a feared complication. 813 86
Airway obstruction
in patients with
sleep apnea
-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) is due to increased critical pressure (Pcrit) of the upper airway. The ideal nasal pressure (Pn) to maintain airway patency should consist of the constant term to account for Pcrit and a term (Rn . V) proportional to flow (V) to account for the dynamic pressure drop through nasal resistance (R n). Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) applied to avoid flow limitation results in a Pn greater than required over most of the breathing cycle. The aim was to assess a flow-dependent positive airway pressure (FDPAP) based on adapting Pn to the instantaneous flow: Pn = P0 + k . V. FDPAP was tested on collapsible airway models and its applicability was assessed in nine patients with SAHS during sleep. In models, FDPAP prevented flow limitation with lower mean P n and work of breathing than CPAP. In patients FDPAP allowed the patients to breathe normally with a mean Pn (6.6 +/- 1.2 cm H2O) systematically and significantly (p < 0.05, paired t test) lower than when applying CPAP (9.1 +/- 1.2 cm H2O). The results found in models and in patients suggest that adapting the applied nasal pressure to the instantaneous breathing flow may be of potential practical interest in SAHS.
...
PMID:Flow-dependent positive airway pressure to maintain airway patency in sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome. 962 Sep 18