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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The benzodiazepines are sedative hypnotic drugs, i.e., central nervous system depressant drugs, that may adversely affect the control of ventilation during sleep. Prescription of these drugs may worsen sleep-related breathing disorders, especially in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or cardiac failure. The most frequent users of sedative hypnotics are the polymorbid elderly with a secondary complaint of insomnia. Although the benzodiazepines may reduce sleep fragmentation, their long-term use may also cause health problems, such as complete obstructive sleep apnea in heavy snorers or short repetitive central
sleep apnea
in patients with recent
myocardial infarction
. Since drugs of this class vary in their effects, it is crucial to note the action of a given benzodiazepine on the control of vital functions during sleep.
...
PMID:Benzodiazepines, breathing, and sleep. 196 16
To examine the hypothesis that
sleep apnoea
is a risk factor for ischaemic heart disease, overnight polysomnography was performed in 101 unselected male survivors of acute myocardial infarction (MI) aged less than 66 yr and in 53 male subjects of similar age without evidence of ischaemic heart disease. The apnoea index (AI, number of apnoea episodes per hour of sleep) was 6.9 (SEM 1.2) in the MI patients versus 1.4 (0.3) in the control subjects. After adjustment for age, body mass index, hypertension, smoking, and cholesterol level, multiple logistic regression analysis identified the top quartile of AI (greater than 5.3) as an independent predictor of MI patients. The relative risk for
myocardial infarction
between the highest and lowest quartiles of AI was 23.3 (95% confidence interval 3.9-139.9).
...
PMID:Association of sleep apnoea with myocardial infarction in men. 197 82
Snoring was investigated in a survey of respiratory disease in Hispanic-Americans of a New Mexico community. A population-based sample of 1222 adults was studied with questionnaires and measurements of height, weight, and blood pressure. The age-adjusted prevalence of regular loud snoring was 27.8% in men and 15.3% in women. Snoring prevalence increased with age and obesity in both men and women. Cigarette smoking was also associated with snoring, but chronic obstructive lung disease and alcohol consumption were not. Snorers more frequently had hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and excessive daytime sleepiness. In contrast to other studies, after adjustment for confounding factors, there was no effect of snoring on hypertension (odds ratio, 1.0; 95% confidence interval, 0.7 to 1.5), but an effect on
myocardial infarction
was still demonstrable (odds ratio, 1.8; 95% confidence interval, 0.9 to 3.6). The association of snoring with sleepiness suggests that respiratory disturbance of sleep related to upper airway obstruction, such as
sleep apnea
, occurs more frequently in snorers in this population.
...
PMID:Snoring in a Hispanic-American population. Risk factors and association with hypertension and other morbidity. 231 Feb 78
The purpose of this study was twofold: to establish an ECG respiration monitoring system, and to evaluate the clinical usefulness of this system. Our purpose was to determine how many patients with cardiovascular disorders may have unrecognized
sleep apnea
and whether such apneic episodes are an important cause of cardiac arrhythmias. The study group included 81 patients, age range 40-95 years, and 13 healthy males, age range 52-72 years. The 24-h ECG respiration recordings were obtained with the two-channel holter recorder. Airflow at the nose using a nasal thermister or chest wall movement by impedance pneumography was recorded as respiration record on the second channel.
Sleep apnea
was observed 69% and 77-100% in the control subjects and patients with cardiovascular disorders, respectively. Episodes of
sleep apnea
were most frequent in the patients with old
myocardial infarction
. Grading of apneas was defined according to the length of apnea. Short duration apneas were observed only in the control subjects, but longer apneic episodes were observed in patients with cardiovascular disorders. Bradyarrhythmias observed were to be relative to apneic episodes longer than 20 s, while ventricular arrhythmias were observed only in the patients with old
myocardial infarction
, coincident with apneas lasting longer than 40 s. Atrioventricular conduction disturbances were also observed to be related to the occurrence of
sleep apnea
. These results suggest that 24-h ECG respiration monitoring is useful not only for the observation of sleep apneic episodes, but also in clarifying the relationship between cardiac arrhythmias and apneic episodes.
...
PMID:Arrhythmogenic properties of disordered breathing during sleep in patients with cardiovascular disorders. 369 Sep 4
During 1976-1988 we diagnosed
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
) in 1,620 adult men and women monitored in the Technion sleep laboratories. Their age at the time of diagnosis ranged between 21 and 79 years. Fifty-seven patients (53 men and 4 women) had died by 1990, 53% due to respiratory-cardiovascular causes. The observed/expected (O/E) mortality rates, calculated for men only, revealed excess mortality of patients under 70 years old. Excess mortality was significant in the fourth and fifth decades (3.33, p < 0.002; 3.23, p < 0.0002, respectively). In patients older than 70 O/E was 0.33 (p < 0.0007). Hierarchical multivariate analysis with four fixed variables [age, body mass index (BMI), hypertension and apnea index] and four additional variables added manually one at a time (heart disease, lung disease, diabetes, apnea duration) was used to determine the predictors of death from all causes, cardiopulmonary causes and from
myocardial infarction
(MI). All four major variables were found to be significant predictors of mortality from all causes, in addition to lung disease and heart disease. Only age and BMI were significant predictors of cardiopulmonary deaths in addition to lung disease. Age, BMI and hypertension predicted MI deaths in addition to lung disease. These results were interpreted to suggest that
SAS
affects death indirectly, most probably by being a risk factor for hypertension.
...
PMID:Mortality in sleep apnea patients: a multivariate analysis of risk factors. 938 Oct 62
Treatment of
sleep apnea
patients may be justified even when symptoms are absent. On the one hand, hypersomnia or daytime sleepiness are subjective symptoms and only reflect one aspect of the clinical syndrome of
sleep apnea
. On the other hand, an apnea index in excess of 5, e.g. the "laboratory diagnosis" of
sleep apnea
, has been reported as an independent risk factor for
myocardial infarction
. The main problem is scientific definition of cut-off points for treatment. There is no controversy about whether patients with symptoms should be treated or not. A CPAP trial seems to be justified in asymptomatic patients with an apnea/hypopnea index in excess of 20-30 and in patients with cardiovascular risk factors when the apnea/hypopnea index is in excess of 5. These laboratory cut-off values are not absolute values but represent flexible guidelines for initiating a CPAP trial in asymptomatic patients with apnea. The reasons for uncertainty whether or not to treat patients with asymptomatic
sleep apnea
are discussed.
...
PMID:[Should patients with asymptomatic sleep apnea syndrome be treated with CPAP?]. 789 63
The as yet unanswered question, whether patients with
sleep apnoea
and apnoea-associated bradyarrhythmias have a higher morbidity and mortality rate, was retrospectively investigated in 132 men with
sleep apnoea
(apnoea index > 10/h). Sleep-associated bradycardic arrhythmias were recorded in 71 (mean age 50.1 years; group 1). For comparison served 61 men with
sleep apnoea
but no bradyarrhythmias (mean age 51.4 years; group 2), matched for age and weight. There was no significant difference between the two groups as to diagnosis and initial findings on ergometry, lung function tests and blood gas analysis. The apnoea index of 48.1 +/- 23.9/h in group 1 was significantly higher than that of 31.9 +/- 20.1/h in group 2 (P < 0.001). During a follow-up period of a mean of 41.1 (19-66) months, two patients in group 1 died (of
myocardial infarction
), while one died (of bronchial carcinoma) in group 2 (follow-up period of 29.6 [18-54] months). The two deaths in group 1 were in a subgroup of 16 patients who had declined treatment or had used it irregularly. There was no death among those who had been treated (n = 54), by nasal continuous positive airway pressure, operation or pacemaker implantation. However, no causal relationship could be established from these data between increased mortality rate and apnoea-associated arrhythmias.
...
PMID:[Morbidity and mortality in sleep apnea and nocturnal bradyarrhythmia]. 808 84
Previous studies have found associations between snoring, or polysomnographic documented
sleep apnea
, and hypertension, cerebral vascular disease, and
myocardial infarction
. The present study examined the relationship of coronary artery disease (CAD) and snoring. One hundred and twenty-two males with positive angiographic studies were compared with fifty-six men, matched in age and socioeconomic status, who had no known history of coronary heart, or other atherosclerotic, disease. The percentage of subjects reporting that they snore "usually" or "always/loudly" increased across the four CAD severity groupings (nonpatient controls = 19.6%, 1 vessel = 44.4%, 2 vessel = 41.9%, 3 vessel = 56.0%) with a p value of .005. Hypertension, body mass index, and pack years of smoking were found to be associated with both coronary artery disease severity and snoring. When these variables were controlled in a multiple regression analysis, the relationship of snoring and CAD severity remained significant at p = .050.
...
PMID:Snoring and the severity of coronary artery disease in men. 808 69
Obstructive sleep apnea is a breathing disorder characterized by repeated collapse of the upper airway during sleep, with cessation of breathing. Four percent of middle-aged men and 2 percent of middle-aged women meet minimal criteria for the
sleep apnea syndrome
. Risk factors include loud, chronic snoring, obesity (especially nuchal), hypertension, excessive daytime sleepiness, and an increased tendency for automobile and work-related accidents. Cardiovascular comorbidity and complications include systemic hypertension, arrhythmias and possibly myocardial ischemia and
myocardial infarction
in patients with coronary artery disease. Diagnosis is confirmed by a sleep study; currently, polysomnography is the optimum test. Treatment options range from behavioral therapy alone for mild cases to a combination of behavioral approaches and continuous positive airway pressure and/or surgery for moderate and severe cases. Continuous positive airway pressure is the most effective noninvasive treatment. Primary care physicians play a key role in the identification, management and follow-up of patients with
sleep apnea
.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea: is your patient at risk? National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Working Group on Sleep Apnea. 854 58
Myocardial infarction
shows a circadian pattern with a maximum in the early morning hours. In patients with sleep-related breathing disorders (SRBD), it is assumed that apnea-associated changes of hemodynamics, blood gases, and rheology lead to a higher frequency of
myocardial infarction
during sleep. This investigation analyzes the circadian pattern of
myocardial infarction
in patients with and without SRBD. Within a time period of 20 months, 89 male patients with acute myocardial infarction were consecutively admitted to the intensive care unit. A nocturnal long-term registration of oxygen saturation, heart rate, breathing sounds, and body position by means of a 4-channel recording system (MESAM IV) was carried out in 59 of the 89 patients 6 to 10 days (evaluation I) and in 43 of 59 patients 22 to 28 days after infarction (evaluation II).
Sleep apnea
with a respiratory-disturbance-index (RDI > or = 10/h was found in 44.1/39.5% of the patients (evaluation I/II). In 22% of the patients, time of infarction was during a sleeping period. Patients with
myocardial infarction
during sleep had a clearly higher RDI in comparison to patients with a
myocardial infarction
during wakefulness (evaluation I: 22.7 versus 9.4/h; p = 0.08; evaluation II: 20.3 versus 7.3; p < 0.05). 53.6% of all myocardial infarctions occurred during the time period 5:00-11:00 a.m. Investigations in a larger number of patients are necessary to confirm these results as well as the relevance of
sleep apnea
as a cardiovascular risk factor.
...
PMID:[Does sleep apnea increase the risk of myocardial infarct during sleep?]. 1044 11
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