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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have described a patient with
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
who showed disappearance of
sleep apnea
by tracheal intubation. All night polygraphic study revealed a clear correlation between the cyclic EEG change and
sleep apnea
. The periodic synchronous discharge (PSD) phase in EEG corresponded to the breathing phase in respiration and non-PSD phase corresponded to the apneic phase. Intratracheal intubation has completely stopped both the apnea and the cyclic EEG change. Therefore, we assumed that the PSD-non-PSD cycle in EEG might causally relate with the peripheral obstruction of the airway during sleep.
...
PMID:Disappearance of sleep apnea by tracheal intubation in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. 620 54
Sleep-related disorders are revisited in the light of the physiological modality of NREM sleep expressed by the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). Owing to its fluctuating properties on vigilance, muscle tone, and vegetative activities, CAP represents a highly favorable condition for the occurrence of interictal generalized and focal lesional EEG discharges, for motor seizures, and for periodic jerks in nocturnal myoclonus. All these manifestations are significantly associated with the components of activation during CAP, i.e., the A phases. On the contrary, the B phases of CAP appear chronologically linked to inhibitory phenomena in epileptic patients and in nocturnal myoclonus. The two phases of CAP seem especially involved in
sleep apnea syndrome
, where respiration is interrupted during a phase B and restored during a phase A. CAP rate, that measures the effort of the brain to maintain sleep, is increased by all conditions that induce vigilance instability such as noise, clinical insomnia, interictal EEG paroxysms, nocturnal seizures, periodic leg movements, and in certain extreme pathologic conditions such as
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
and stage 2 coma.
...
PMID:Clinical applications of cyclic alternating pattern. 824 61
A case of
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(
CJD
) with presenting Wernicke encephalopathy (WE)-like symptoms and severe insomnia is presented. An 80-year-old alcoholic man with a 6 month history of tremors, ataxia, memory loss and confabulation, developed profound insomnia, confusion, and delirium with vivid hallucinations. Polysomnography revealed a marked reduction of sleep time, with central-type
sleep apnea
. Neither myoclonus nor periodic synchronous discharge (PSD) was observed. An autopsy revealed diffuse spongiform changes and astrocytosis throughout the cerebral gray matter, with severe involvement of the mammillary bodies and thalamus. Prion protein (PrP) immunostaining was positive in kuru plaques in the cerebellum, PrP polymorphism at codon 129 was heterozygous Met/Val, and proteinase K resistant PrP (PrP(res)) was demonstrated by Western blotting. The lack of necrotizing lesions in the mammillary bodies, thalamus, and periaqueductal gray matter could rule out WE. The data suggest that the present case of
CJD
is consistent with PrP(res) type 2 (
CJD
M/V 2), but was unique in the lack of some typical
CJD
signs and the presence of signs of WE and sleep abnormalities.
...
PMID:Wernicke encephalopathy-like symptoms as an early manifestation of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in a chronic alcoholic. 1037 Oct 84
We describe an autopsy case of MM1-type sporadic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(
CJD
), the duration of which was 93 days. The patient was a 59-year-old Japanese man with no family history of prion disease or known iatrogenic exposure to
CJD
. His first symptom was dysesthesia in the left arm, suggestive of cervical cord involvement, and he showed rapidly progressive neurologic signs, such as dysarthria, dysphagia, lethargy,
sleep apnea
and respiratory failure, suggestive of brainstem involvement. Progressive mental deterioration combined with episodes of myoclonic seizure and periodic synchronous discharges on the electroencephalogram were observed in the later disease stage. Autopsy showed typical spongiform change to be wide-spread in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices, thalamus and basal ganglia. Synaptic-type PrP deposition was marked in the cerebral cortex, thalamus and basal ganglia. In the cerebellum, although the granular, molecular and Purkinje cell layers were well preserved from neuronal loss and gliosis, PrP deposition was marked in the molecular and granular cell layers. Spongiform degeneration and neuronal loss were not seen in the brainstem and spinal cord, but relatively marked PrP deposition was observed in the quadrigeminal body, substantia nigra, pontine nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus and posterior horn. Immunohistochemical staining for HLA-DR showed proliferation of activated microglia in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices, pontine nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus and posterior horn. The mechanisms underlying the neurologic symptoms and signs were unclear, but we speculate that, in addition to widespread involvement of the cerebral cortex, PrP deposition and microglial activation in the brainstem and spinal cord were responsible.
...
PMID:Autopsy case of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease presenting with signs suggestive of brainstem and spinal cord involvement. 1720 92