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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Increasing evidence suggests that snoring and
sleep apnea
are associated with cerebrovascular diseases. Several other factors may be involved in this association because many established or potential risk factors for
stroke
are related to snoring and
sleep apnea
. These include arterial hypertension, coronary heart disease, age, obesity, smoking, and alcohol consumption. Recent epidemiologic and clinical studies indicate, however, that snoring can increase the risk of
stroke
independently of these confounding factors. Accumulating epidemiologic evidence of long-term harmful effects of the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome appears to be related to increasing vascular morbidity and mortality. Potential mediators among snoring, obstructive sleep apneas, and
stroke
include cardiac arrhythmias and other hemodynamic disturbances, increased levels of catecholamines, and disturbances in cerebral blood flow caused by sleep apneas, as well as hypoxemic periods that may potentiate atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Snoring, sleep apnea syndrome, and stroke. 163 Jun 43
To determine if a history of snoring is a risk factor for brain infarction, I conducted a case-control study of risk factors for ischemic
stroke
using 177 consecutive male patients aged 16-60 (mean 49) years with acute brain infarction. For each patient I chose an age-matched (+/- 6 years) male control. Arterial hypertension, coronary heart disease, snoring (habitually or often), and heavy drinking (greater than 300 g/wk) were risk factors in the stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis. The odds ratio of snoring for brain infarction was 2.13. By McNemar's test this association increased strongly if a history of
sleep apnea
, excessive daytime sleepiness, and obesity were all present with snoring (odds ratio 8.00). My study indicates that snoring may be a risk factor for ischemic
stroke
, possibly because of the higher prevalence of an obstructive sleep apnea syndrome among snorers than nonsnorers.
Stroke
1991 Aug
PMID:Snoring and the risk of ischemic brain infarction. 186 48
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.
...
PMID:Health implications of obesity. 203 92
The OSA syndrome, described over 100 years ago, was rediscovered in 1966. It is a common disorder, especially among fat, middle-aged men. Stentorian snoring and diurnal somnolence are the cardinal manifestations and should always lead to an examination during sleep. That examination (polysomnography) can demonstrate the pathognomonic events--repetitive apneas occurring in sleep--which signal the failure of the sleeping brain to maintain the patency of the supraglottic airway. All evidence points to the problem being an abnormal pharyngeal airway, one which has a shape or size or compliance that allows inspiratory collapse as the normal loss of pharyngeal dilator muscle tone occurs with sleep. The apneas are asphyxic events terminated by arousals which fragment sleep continuity and lead to the daytime sleepiness. Because the snoring occurs during sleep, the arousals are unremembered, and the sleepiness can develop so gradually that the patient may forget what normal alertness is like. It is important to interview the patient's spouse or partner. Besides obesity and maleness, other risk factors for OSA are diseases that have an impact on the configuration or effective compliance of the pharyngeal passageway. Recent studies support the clinical intuition that
sleep apnea
is undesirable. Sleepiness leads to accidents. The hypoxemia occurring during apnea can lead to potentially fatal cardiac dysrhythmias. A number of reports suggest that snoring and
sleep apnea
are associated with an increased risk of
stroke
, myocardial ischemia, and infarction. Finally, there are now two papers showing a significantly decreased probability of 5-year survival in patients with symptomatic
sleep apnea
. The good news is that treatment with tracheostomy or NCPAP improves mortality rates to normal. Approximately 90 per cent of patients can tolerate a night's initial trial with CPAP. Long-term acceptance of CPAP has now been reviewed in a number of studies, and it appears to be about 65 to 70 per cent.
...
PMID:Sleep disorders and upper airway obstruction in adults. 219 4
Recreational diving is a popular sport, although human ability to stay in and under water is severely limited physiologically. An understanding of these limitations enhances safety and enjoyment of sports diving. Breath-hold diving involves head-out water immersion, apnoea and submersion, exercise, cold stress, and pressure exposure. Each of these components, by itself, elicits prominent and specific physiological effects. Combination of these factors produces a unique and interesting physiological response generally known as diving reflex. Humans display weak diving responses, but exhibit no oxygen conservation function. Nevertheless, application of diving-induced physiological changes is now finding its way into clinical practice. Apnoea, face immersion, and head-out water immersion all show promise of clinical application. There are several spin-offs from diving research worth noting. Diuresis, enhancement of cardiac performance, and redistribution of blood flow, all produced by head-out water immersion, have been shown to be clinically useful, besides providing physiological data useful to space travel. Results from investigations on apnoea have been shown to be relevant to the following: treating some forms of cardiac arrhythmias; understanding drowning, sudden infant death syndrome and
sleep apnoea
; and confirming hyperventilation as the major cause of drowning. In comparison to marine mammals, humans are poor divers because of severe physiological constraints which limit their breath-hold time, diving depth, and ability to conserve body heat. Although under special circumstances humans can achieve unusually long breath-hold time and reach exceptional depth with a single breath, the sustainable working time and depth are only about 1 minute and 5 metres, respectively. Hypothermia inevitably results in divers working in the ocean. Without thermal protection, the intolerable limit of 35 degrees C is reached within 30 minutes in winter (10 degrees C) water and within 60 to 90 minutes in summer. Nevertheless, effective harvest work can be performed by humans in the ocean, and recreational benefits enhanced when these physiological limitations are respected. An unusual circulatory state exists during head-out water immersion in that there is a sustained increase of
stroke
volume. This results in 30% increase in cardiac output when the subject is resting in thermal neutral water, indicating a substantial overperfusion for the oxygen requirement. Furthermore, animal experiments showed that the elevated blood flow is preferentially channeled to the liver, fat, and the organs in the splanchnic region.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Applied physiology of diving. 327 55
This review summarizes briefly the present knowledge on sleep-related factors in ischaemic heart disease. A marked circadian rhythm in the frequency of onset of acute myocardial infarction has been found, but the exact mechanism is not known. The circadian variation is possibly explained by several mechanisms. The best documented is
sleep apnoea
syndrome, which seems to be a risk factor for ischaemic heart disease and
stroke
. Stressful REM-sleep seems to be potentially arrhythmogenic in patients with decreased cardiopulmonary function. The role of coronary spasm, increased thrombocyte aggregation and mental stress in sleep disorders is still poorly understood.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular stress and sleep. 331 Aug 37
Medullary disorders can be associated with a
sleep apnea syndrome
. The present patient developed a
sleep apnea syndrome
with approximately 25 episodes of apnea or hypopnea during each hour of sleep following a lateral medullary infarction. The presence of predisposing factors and involvement of respiratory centers in the area of the medullary lesion may determine the appearance of
sleep apnea
with brainstem infarction. Investigation of breathing during sleep may be helpful in such cases.
Stroke
1988 May
PMID:Sleep apnea as a feature of bulbar stroke. 336 99
Men who snore heavily have an increased incidence of hypertension, angina,
stroke
, and neuropsychologic dysfunction, which may be due to nocturnal oxygen desaturation. Nocturnal oxygen therapy might be beneficial to such individuals by improving oxygenation and relieving tissue hypoxia. Twenty-eight asymptomatic heavy snoring men were recruited for polysomnographic monitoring during sleep. During the first half-night, air was breathed through a nasal cannula, and during the latter half-night, 2 L/min oxygen was administered. Breathing air, 20 subjects demonstrated sleep apneas, hypopneas and nocturnal oxygen desaturation. Eighteen subjects had more than ten apneas plus hypopneas per hour. Thirteen subjects reached low oxygen saturation below 80 percent and eight below 70 percent. Only 13 of the 20 subjects showed improvement with oxygen therapy. Apneas alone were not decreased in frequency and were lengthened with oxygen therapy. Episodes of oxygen desaturation were improved by oxygen therapy and consequently, rates of hypopnea were decreased. Severe
sleep apnea
, hypopnea and oxygen desaturation are common in asymptomatic male snorers, and oxygen therapy is not always beneficial.
...
PMID:Snoring, nocturnal hypoxemia, and the effect of oxygen inhalation. 362 20
Complaints about sleep are extremely common in the elderly, leading to an impression that aging-related sleep problems are virtually normal and benign. However, studies have shown that such complaints as habitual snoring, frequent awakening, nocturnal sweating, and awakening with anxiety, may be signs of genuine sleep disorders. The most prevalent and most serious aging-related sleep disorder is
sleep apnea
. There is recent evidence of an association between
sleep apnea
and circulatory disorders, including hypertension,
stroke
, and angina pectoris, and with reduced life expectancy. The older
sleep apnea
victim may not complain of daytime sleepiness, the usual symptom in younger patients.
Sleep apnea
, and several other sleep disorders of the elderly are treatable, once an accurate diagnosis is made. Physicians are urged to make questions about sleep as routine as the taking of blood pressure.
...
PMID:Sleep disorders in the elderly: rationale for clinical awareness. 367 42
Traffic accidents (TA) are, after heart disease, cancer and
stroke
, the fourth death cause among the general population. Although the number of AT caused by diseases-excluding alcoholism- seems to be reduced, interaction between organic pathology and functional ability increases the importance of this problem. This paper revises the literature on the relation between AT and specific neurological diseases: epilepsy, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (
SAS
),
stroke
, dementia and Parkinson disease. Also, the problems and the role of the neurologist in assessing driving ability in patients with brain damage is analyzed, with special reference to the legal condition in Spain. The insufficiency of diagnostic labels as predictors of driving ability is stressed; the group of patients affected by these pathologies does not present greater TA risk than young drivers twice that of the general population. In the cases of epilepsy,
SAS
and ECV, which can cause episodic driving inability, defining recurrence probabilities and finding regulation formulas is the task of clinical epidemiologists and the regulative authorities. In the case of dementia, Parkinson disease and ECV, causing psychomotor performance deterioration, the basic problem, complicated by the presence of comorbility in these patients, is the development of valid clinical scales for driving ability assessment. The regulative authorities need simple measures which are often difficult to develop. Meanwhile, it is the task of the neurologist, as part of the therapeutic intervention during the medical encounter, to discuss driving risks with each patient.
...
PMID:[Neurological diseases and driving]. 749 90
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