Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (sleep apnea)
8,000 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with Cushing's syndrome (CS) frequently have sleep complaints. We evaluated sleep polysomnographically in 22 patients, including 17 with pituitary-ACTH-dependent Cushing's disease (CD) and five with CS from an adrenal tumor. Data were compared to healthy controls of comparable age. Seven patients (32%) demonstrated at least mild sleep apnea (> or = 9.4 events/hour), and four of 22 (18%) had > or = 17.5 events/hour. The apneic CD and CS patients had a trend for a greater complaint of excessive daytime sleepiness. Both apneic and nonapneic groups had considerable snoring and obesity. The electroencephalographic (EEG) sleep of nonapneic patients was compared to that of normal subjects. Nonapneic CD patients differed strikingly from healthy volunteers in sleep continuity and architecture, demonstrating lighter, fragmented sleep. Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in CD patients bore many similarities to the sleep of patients with major depression, with REM latency being significantly shortened and REM density significantly increased. Continued examination of EEG sleep in CD patients may shed light on similarities in pathophysiology between CD and major depression, disorders which are characterized by both a dysfunction of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and alterations in mood.
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PMID:Sleep architecture and sleep apnea in patients with Cushing's disease. 133 12

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

Two patients with mixed sleep apnea and autopsy-documented lipomas of the mesencephalic tectum and rostral pons are presented. Microscopically, the locus ceruleus was unilaterally invaded by a tumor in one case and may have been compressed in the other. Adipocytes and fibrous tissue were present adjacent to pial surfaces and around small blood vessels within the parenchyma. There was prominent astrogliosis in the adjacent neuropil. Although respiratory control is a complex, multifocal phenomena, these findings raise the possibility that the locus ceruleus or adjacent brain stem regions may be affected in some instances of sleep apnea.
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PMID:Lipomas of the mesencephalic tectum and rostral pons associated with sleep apnea syndrome. 236 96

Seven adult patients with a severe form of sleep apnea syndrome (mean apnea index, 47) underwent surgery for significant structural abnormalities at nose and/or throat level (septal deviation, turbinal hypertrophy, enlarged tonsils, long uvula, pharyngeal tumor). Although a subjective benefit was claimed by most patients, the polygraphic data showed no improvement or only a modest improvement in breathing pattern, oxyhemoglobin saturation, or general sleep architecture except in one patient. In this patient the evolution of the syndrome was recent (3 years) and surgical management of a parapharyngeal tumor resulted in a cure. We conclude that in adults with sleep apnea syndrome of long-standing, surgical correction of nasal or pharyngeal abnormalities should not be expected to normalize sleep and breathing. This contrasts with the known benefits achieved by the same type of surgery in children. Surgery might nevertheless be necessary in some adults to permit the application of other therapeutic means (ie, nasal continuous positive airway pressure).
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PMID:Failure of tonsil and nose surgery in adults with long-standing severe sleep apnea syndrome. 277 89

The case of a 40-year-old man with syringobulbo-myelia secondary to an unresectable spinal extramedullary tumor is described. Fifteen years previously, the patient had undergone a laminectomy of T8 through T12 for a "benign" spinal cord tumor at another hospital and had become paraplegic; the tumor (neurinoma) had been neglected for 12 years. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a large thoracolumbar spinal tumor with syringobulbo-myelia. Polysomnography showed central-, peripheral-, and mixed-type sleep apneas. After the failure of an attempted syringoperitoneal shunt, cordectomy at the level of T6 was performed with a good result. The mechanisms of the formation of syringomyelia and sleep apnea secondary to a caudal spinal extramedullary tumor are discussed.
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PMID:Cordectomy for syringobulbo-myelia with sleep apnea secondary to a spinal extramedullary tumor: case report. 292 88

A 7-week-old infant with severe sleep apnea underwent polysomnography that revealed as many as 455 obstructive apneas per night; the apneic episodes had a mean duration of 34 s. A growing tumor in the neck, a parapharyngeal cystic hygroma, was discovered and surgically removed. The infant's condition improved dramatically, and a follow-up polygraphic recording was normal. During the following 10 months the child's condition remained stable. The case reported illustrates a rare cause of severe sleep obstructive apnea. It also reinforces the need for a complete medical approach to the diagnosis and treatment of obstructive sleep apnea in infants.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea induced by a parapharyngeal cystic hygroma in an infant. 388 Jan 77

Anterior mandibulectomy can precipitate the development of sleep apnea. All head and neck tumor patients having had extensive composite anterior oral cavity resections should be evaluated for sleep apnea before decannulation of their tracheostomy tube. Subsequent flap and/or rigid reconstruction of the lower jaw appears to prevent the development of sleep apnea. Fascial sling suspension of the lower lip does not appear to prevent sleep apnea.
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PMID:Mandibulectomy without reconstruction can cause sleep apnea. 650 80

A case is presented of an aviator with chronic disequilibrium, oscillopsia, and central sleep apnea. History, physical examination, and special studies are presented establishing a diagnosis of epidermoid tumor at the foramen magnum. Differential diagnosis and relation of findings to the lesion are presented. The aeromedical significance of this case is to reinforce the importance of persistence and the team concept in establishing diagnoses when aviators present with confusing or unexplained symptoms.
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PMID:Evaluation of an aviator with chronic disequilibrium, oscillopsia, and central sleep apnea. 818 60

A 60-year-old obese woman was admitted for evaluation of excessive daytime sleepiness, loud snoring, cyanosis, systemic edema, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Laboratory examination showed severe hypoxemia, hypercapnea, metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia and hyperaldosteronism. CT scan showed a left adrenal tumor. A diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome associated with primary aldosteronism was established. Metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia and sodium retention due to hyperaldosteronism were thought to be factors exacerbating her sleep apnea.
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PMID:[A case report of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome associated with primary aldosteronism]. 818 53

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSAS) is children is commonly caused by upper airway obstruction, such as that caused by adeno-tonsillar hypertrophy. We report a rare case of SAS due to a nasopharyngeal tumor. The patient was a 10-year-old boy who complained of snoring and sleep apnea. The tumor was found in the nasopharynx and mesopharyngeal space. We diagnosed this case as OSAS by overnight sleep study (Apnea Hypopnea Index: AHI = 19.67). The tumor was removed under general anesthesia. Histopathology revealed features of nasopharyngeal angiofibroma. After removal of the tumor, his symptoms resolved completely. A follow-up overnight sleep study confirmed resolution of OSAS. At the last follow up, conducted 17 months after the operation there were no signs of tumor recurrence.
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PMID:[A case of sleep apnea syndrome due to a nasopharyngeal tumor]. 882 49


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