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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (sleep apnea)
8,000 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) is a well established sleep disorder with high morbidity and mortality. Patients are most often middle-aged men. SAS occurs in at least 1% of the adult population. Several studies have suggested that SAS is extremely frequent in the elderly, its prevalence ranging from 18 to 73% in this group. However, the generalization of these results to elderly cohorts is questionable because of several limitations of these studies, including lack of standard selection criteria, variation in recording techniques, the night to night variability of sleep apnea and the use of a moderate level of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) to define SAS (5 apneas per hour). The study best designed for valid extrapolation to the whole aged population estimates the frequency of SAS at 18%. However, most of these patients reported satisfactory sleep, and epidemiologic criteria for a causal association between SAS in the elderly and cardiovascular disease have not been satisfied. The conclusions of numerous studies dealing with impairment in cognitive function and SAS in the elderly are controversial. In fact, if the diagnostic threshold is increased from 5 apneas to 10 apneas plus hypopneas per hour, elderly SAS patients have more sleep disturbances, are more depressed and have cognitive deficits as compared to normal old persons. When an appropriate diagnostic index is used, SAS in the elderly resembles SAS described in the middle-aged population. In addition, a high apnea plus hypopnea index is an ominous predictor of mortality in the elderly population, and a very high level of SDB is an extremely significant risk factor for mortality during sleep phase in these patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Sleep apnea syndrome in the elderly. 147 Aug 7

Obstructive sleep apnea may contribute to the development of pulmonary hypertension and RVF primarily through pulmonary vasoconstriction secondary to hypoxia. Several recent studies indicate, however, that intermittent apnea-related hypoxia is not sufficient to cause sustained pulmonary hypertension. These studies have been consistent in showing that pulmonary hypertension and RVF are almost invariably seen in the presence of diurnal hypoxia. Sustained pulmonary hypertension, therefore, appears to be associated with sustained hypoxia as is the case in COPD. Patients with OSA who have hypoxia while awake are, as a rule, obese and have mild-to-moderate diffuse obstructive airways disease. Thus, most cases of pulmonary hypertension in association with OSA result from a combination of OSA, obesity, and diffuse obstructive airways disease, a so-called overlap syndrome. However, from the therapeutic viewpoint, it is apparent that treatment of OSA by NCPAP or tracheostomy, in such cases, is usually sufficient to reverse pulmonary hypertension and RVF. More recent work has provided strong evidence that OSA can play a role in the pathogenesis of LV heart failure in patients with CHF of otherwise unknown etiology. It is likely that this occurs through a combination of increased LV afterload related to exaggerated negative Pit swings during obstructive apneas, to intermittent hypoxia, and to chronically elevated sympathoadrenal activity. Reversal of OSA by NCPAP in these patients may relieve LV heart failure. These findings add a new dimension to our understanding of the pathophysiologic effects of OSA on the cardiovascular system by demonstrating that the LV is a structure that may suffer functional impairment secondary to the stresses imposed by OSA. Finally, it has now become apparent that CSR in patients with CHF can cause symptoms of a sleep apnea syndrome when associated with intermittent hypoxia and arousals from sleep. Reversal of CSR during sleep by NCPAP can lead to alleviation of these symptoms and possibly to reduced cardiac dyspnea and LV systolic function as well. Taken together, this suggests that much more extensive use of polysomnography may be warranted in the investigation of cardiovascular disease. The reasons are compelling: sleep apnea disorders are common and eminently treatable conditions whose reversal can result in improved right and left heart function and symptomatic improvement in patients with impaired myocardial function.
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PMID:Right and left ventricular functional impairment and sleep apnea. 152 13

Acromegaly is an uncommon disorder and may present in a variety of ways, leading to considerable delay in diagnosis. Unlike other pituitary tumors, tumors associated with acromegaly tend to be fairly large in most patients. Thus, symptoms may be commonly due to the tumor mass as well as to hormone oversecretion. Mortality is two- to threefold increased due to cardiovascular, respiratory, and neoplastic causes. An increase in diabetes mellitus and hypertension may contribute to the first of these. Early treatment may reverse the diabetes, soft tissue changes, sleep apnea, cardiovascular disease, and neuromuscular disease. The effect of early treatment on neoplasia is unclear, and patients probably should continue to be screened, especially for colon neoplasia, even after appropriate therapy for the acromegaly. Hypopituitarism may be present initially as a result of tumor mass but may also develop as a result of ablative therapy.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of acromegaly. 152 14

To determine whether oxygen desaturation occurs during sleep in high tetraplegics, 10 neurologically stable male patients (aged 17 to 55 years) with complete motor lesions (C4 to C6) had continuous pulse oximetry recordings and sleep observations on two nights. The patients were studied during admissions for nonrespiratory problems (eg, pressure sores, urinary infection, respite). Lung function tests and daytime arterial blood gases were also measured. Mean forced vital capacity was 46% of predicted, but mean awake PaO2 and PaCO2 were normal (95.0 mmHg and 42.8 mmHg, respectively). Three subjects showed severe nocturnal oxygen desaturation spending greater than 10% of the time overnight with arterial oxyhaemoglobin saturation (SaO2) levels of less than 90%. For the group as a whole, the percentage of time spent under 90% SaO2 correlated with body mass index. Mean overnight SaO2 correlated inversely with body mass index and directly with maximal expiratory pressure, a measure of respiratory muscle strength. Low overnight SaO2 was also associated with higher levels of injury. The pattern of nocturnal oxygen desaturation observed was episodic and was suggestive of obstructive sleep apnoea during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Levels of nocturnal oxygen desaturation similar to those observed in the three most severely affected patients have been shown, in other disorders, to be associated with cognitive impairment, cardiovascular disease and increased mortality. Our results suggest up to a third of high tetraplegics may be at risk of potentially serious nocturnal hypoxic episodes.
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PMID:Hypoxia episodes during sleep in high tetraplegia. 162 16

The health risks of obesity increase with its severity and reach significance at a weight greater than 20% above optimal, by using life insurance tables, or at a body mass index greater than 27. Risks include hypertension, insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, hypertriglyceridemia, low high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, and, in some studies, high total-and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol. There is an increased mortality from endometrial cancer in women and from colorectal cancer in men. Chronic hypoxia and hypercapnia, sleep apnea, gout, and degenerative joint disease can occur with more severe obesity. The distribution of body fat is directly related to these health risks. Abdominal obesity is more dangerous than gluteal-femoral obesity because the amount of intraabdominal fat seems to determine much of the increased peril; therefore, risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke, hypertension, and diabetes increase with abdominal obesity, even independently of total fat mass.
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PMID:Health implications of obesity. 203 92

Knowledge of the connection between habitual snoring diseases and obstructive sleep apnoea has stimulated research into sleep disturbance in patients at high risk of cardiovascular disease. Any disturbance of nasal ventilation leads to a higher resistance to breathing and may cause cardiovascular complications in the long run. Anatomical and functional conditions that lead to intermittent incomplete blockage or complete occlusion of the upper respiratory tract must be detected and surgically eliminated, if possible. Surgical procedures for treating snoring and obstructive sleep apnoea may be successful and fill the gap between conservative treatment and continuous nasal positive airway pressure therapy. Our experience in 24 patients in presented.
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PMID:[Experience with surgical therapy in snoring and sleep apnea]. 206 69

Holter recordings of subjects apparently free from cardiovascular disease have demonstrated a moderate sinusal and nodal depression during sleep. This depression does not seem to be sufficient to create overt cardiovascular disorders in apparently healthy subjects, but it may aggravate or even reveal an underlying disorder of rhythm or conduction in elderly people or in patients taking drugs that potentiate its effects. In sleep apnea syndrome prolonged episodes of apnea may produce a paroxysmal, then permanent increase in pulmonary arterial pressure, which may lead to right heart failure. These episodes also increase the pre- and after-load and decrease myocardial contractility, thus facilitating the occurrence of left ventricular failure, potentiated by systemic arterial hypertension, overweight or even coronary disease, all conditions that are often present in these subjects. Arterial hypertension is so frequent in sleep apnea syndrome that some authors advocate a systematic search for the syndrome by Holter recordings before the hypertension is pronounced "essential". All studies confirm the existence of rhythm and conduction disorders directly related to apneic episodes. These disorders decrease or regress after a well-conducted treatment of the sleep apnea syndrome. They are mainly of the "hypokinetic" type, created by depression of sinus activity and conduction pathways. Their frequency, their severity and, in particular, the risk of sudden death they carry seem to have been overestimated, especially since no evidence has ever been produced of a potentially lethal rhythm disorder occurring during sleep apnea. Nevertheless, there is no certainty that these patients are not at risk of sudden death related to their sleep apnea syndrome.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular disorders during sleep]. 214 78

Much has been written about snoring and its affects on health, in particular its possible influence on cardiovascular disease. However, there are many assumptions made when linking the report of snoring to any consequences such as hypertension, heart disease or stroke. In particular it is not clear how snoring might influence the cardiovascular system, whether subjective reports of snoring are accurate, and snoring might only be acting as a marker for some common risk factor such as upper body obesity; a particular risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and through neck circumference, snoring. There is much better evidence that snoring is an important cause of sleepiness, even in the absence of conventional sleep apnoea.
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PMID:Epidemiology of snoring and its consequences. 761 44

Complaints of sleep disturbance increase with age. Objective sleep assessments using polysomnography reveal sleep impairments (increased wakefulness and arousal from sleep; decreased slow wave sleep) even in healthy seniors. Both polysomnographic sleep and subjective sleep worsen in the presence of health impairments related to drug use, pain, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, or other emotional disorders. In addition to normal aging and chronic disease, sleep complaints can also result from poor sleep habits, specific occult disorders during sleep, or some combination of these factors. Occult disorders include sleep apnea syndrome, periodic leg movements, and restless legs syndrome during sleep. Diagnosis and treatment of these and other sleep disorders is discussed. Both pharmacological and nonpharmacological treatments are considered, with an emphasis on behavioral and educative treatment approaches.
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PMID:Sleep and sleep disorders in older adults. 779 28

The association between snoring and blood pressure is still a matter for debate, partly because of uncertainty about the definition of snoring and partly because confounding factors may affect systemic blood pressure such as obesity, sleep apnoea, and nocturnal hypoxaemia. To isolate the contribution of each of these factors, 1415 patients (389 females, 1026 males) referred to a sleep disorders centre were studied. A full history was obtained with particular attention to cardiovascular disease and medications. The patients had nocturnal polysomnography including objective measurement of snoring, and blood pressure was measured in the morning. 18% of non-snores had hypertension as did 20% of heavy snores (not significantly different). Multivariate linear regression analysis showed that snoring was not a significant determinant of blood pressure. Only age, male sex, apnoea/hypopnoea index, and body mass index contributed significantly to the variability of blood pressure. We conclude that snoring in the absence of sleep apnoea is not associated with raised blood pressure.
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PMID:Blood pressure, snoring, obesity, and nocturnal hypoxaemia. 791 47


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