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

The nadir of SaO2 during an obstructive apnea is dependent upon the apnea's duration and the rate of fall of saturation (dSaO2/dt). We postulated that a low Q, such as in patients with congestive heart failure with sleep apnea, or a reduction in Q, as seen in some humans during obstructive sleep apnea, might steepen dSaO2/dt. The mechanism postulated was lowering of SvO2 with increased pulmonary capillary blood oxygen uptake and faster depletion of alveolar oxygen. This study examines dSaO2/dt following the onset of apnea in eight spontaneously breathing adult baboons. Nonrepetitive obstructive apneas (30, 45, and 60 seconds) were created by clamping an indwelling cuffed endotracheal tube at the end of expiration. Following baseline measurements, the animals were given a bolus of a rapid-acting beta-adrenergic blocker followed by continuous infusion to reduce cardiac output and to limit the cardiovascular response to obstructive asphyxia. Fiberoptic catheters were used for continuous monitoring of SaO2, SvO2, and cardiac output. Esophageal pressure and relative thoracic gas volume (Respitrace) were monitored to insure equivalence of lung volume at the onset of apnea. Beta-adrenergic blockade reduced resting Q by a mean of 25 percent. The blocked vs unblocked dSaO2/dt was 0.73 vs 0.72 percent/s, 0.76 vs 0.73 percent/s, and 0.70 vs 0.71 percent/s for 30-second, 45-second, and 60-second apneas, respectively. Thus, mean dSaO2/dt for all durations of apneas was unaffected by beta-adrenergic blockade. We concluded that dSaO2/dt is not influenced by limited Q preceding or induced by obstructive asphyxia.
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PMID:Effect of cardiac output reduction on rate of desaturation in obstructive apnea. 167 Dec 12

Previous studies of single families have suggested that familial factors may be important in the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea. In this report, the role of inheritance in obstructive sleep apnea was assessed by quantitating the degree of familial clustering of symptoms associated with sleep-related breathing disorders. In total, 272 subjects from 29 families identified through an index case with obstructive sleep apnea and 21 control families with no relative known to have sleep apnea were studied with questionnaires that ascertained health status and symptoms. The unadjusted odds ratios of habitual or disruptive snoring, breathing pauses, and excessive day-time sleepiness in subjects with a single relative with the same symptom were 1.40 to 1.53 (p less than 0.05). Odds ratios increased progressively for subjects with increasing numbers of symptomatic relatives). Adjustment for body mass index, age, and gender modestly reduced these odds ratios to 1.33 to 1.42. These data suggest a significant familial aggregation of symptoms associated with sleep-disordered breathing that appears independent of familial similarities in weight.
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PMID:Studies in the genetics of obstructive sleep apnea. Familial aggregation of symptoms associated with sleep-related breathing disturbances. 173 54

Presented in an illustrative case report and a review of the anesthetic management of obstructive sleep apnea patients. Preoperative evaluation should include a thorough airway evaluation and a comprehensive cardiovascular and pulmonary evaluation. With polysomnography, identification of the severity of sleep apnea can be idenified. Although sleep centers vary in their definitions, severe obstructive sleep apnea is diagnosed if the patient demonstrates an apnea index greater than 70 and an oxygen (O2) desaturation less than 80% with cardiovascular sequelae. Severe sleep apnea patients are at extreme risk for general anesthesia. These risks should be discussed preoperatively with the patient. Unsupervised preoperative sedation should be avoided because of the extreme sensitivity of these patients to sedatives and airway obstruction. Intraoperative management of the obstructive sleep apnea patient varies depending on the severity of the sleep apnea. Invasive monitoring may be necessary if the patient demonstrates evidence of cardiopulmonary dysfunction. With the assistance of the otolaryngologist, the anesthesiologist can formulate an approach to establishing an airway. Intraoperative opioids and sedatives should be limited. The recovery of the sleep apnea patient is extremely important and is the time when most airway emergencies occur. Extubation of the patient should occur when appropriate surgical personnel and equipment are available in case of an airway emergency. Steroids may be used to decrease the amount of airway swelling. Supplemental O2 should be used in patients who demonstrate desaturation. Opioids and sedatives should be avoided, as should other drugs that have central and sedating effects. Postoperative pain is effectively controlled with acetaminophen and topical anesthetic sprays. Postoperative monitoring for apnea, desaturation, and dysrhythmias is a necessity in sleep apnea patients.
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PMID:Anesthetic management of obstructive sleep apnea patients. 176 Jan 69

We used polysomnography, echocardiography and ventilatory measurements to study 50 patients suspected of having OSA to determine a link to RVH. Twenty-eight patients (56 percent) had OSA and 20 (71 percent) of those had isolated RVH. We evaluated patients with RVH and divided them into two groups, those with apnea and those without apnea. The patients with sleep apnea were younger, weighed more, had greater BSA and had lower average oxygen saturations during the sleep study period. We divided the group with apnea into those with RVH and those without it. Those patients with RVH had a higher AI, longer average apnea time, a greater duration of longest apnea and a lower average oxygen saturation for the period of the sleep study. In addition, those with RVH had a lower average oxygen saturation during each apneic episode with a p value equaling 0.09.
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PMID:Right ventricular hypertrophy detected by echocardiography in patients with newly diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea. 183 Aug 38

The article reports on the results obtained by uvulopalatopharyngoplastic surgery (= UPPPS) in 31 patients suffering from obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (= OSAS) and in 9 patients with habitual or obstructive snoring. All patients were subjected to thorough preoperative examination including rhinometry, nasopharyngeal video-endoscopy, radiocephalometry and polysomnography. In 8 out of 9 (89%) of the habitually snoring patients and in 17 of 31 (55%) of OSAS patients, surgery was successful. In these patients, a postoperative respiratory disturbance index (RDI) of less than 10 was recorded, whereas in 4 patients (13%) the postoperative RDI was between 10 and 15. Ten patients did not respond satisfactorily to UPPPS (32%). RDI was postoperatively still above 15. Analysis of patient data shows that almost all habitually snoring patients and the OSAS patients with slight overweight and low to medium apnoea index were successfully treated with UPPPS. In accordance with these results a treatment concept has been drawn up for OSAS patients that takes stock of all the possibilities and limitations of available conservative and surgical treatment methods.
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PMID:[Surgical therapy of obstructive sleep apnea syndromes: results of the Ulm treatment program]. 186 9

15 patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and arterial hypertension (H-OSAS), 25 normotensive patients with sleep apnea syndrome (N-OSAS) and 20 healthy age-matched controls (C) were included in this study. Ventilatory responses to activation (hypoxia) and inactivation (hyperoxia) of carotid chemoreceptors were studied in all subjects. Relationship between hypoxic ventilatory reactivity and nocturnal bradycardia during apnea-phases was analysed in both groups of patients. Results and conclusions. 1. We found an impairment of ventilatory response to hypoxia in H-OSAS and N-OSAS patients. However, the increase in ventilation in response to hypoxia was significantly greater in H-OSAS as compared to N-OSAS patients. 2. An augmented ventilatory response to inactivation of carotid chemoreceptors (the decrease in ventilation), observed in H-OSAS patients, indicates an increase in resting peripheral chemoreceptors drive in this group of patients. 3. The relationship between ventilatory response to hypoxia and nocturnal bradycaria in obstructive sleep apnea patients suggests, that hypoxic reactivity of arterial chemoreceptors might be involved in the origin of bradycardia during apnea events.
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PMID:Peripheral chemoreceptor reflex in obstructive sleep apnea patients; a relationship between ventilatory response to hypoxia and nocturnal bradycardia during apnea events. 186 15

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.
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PMID:Snoring and the risk of ischemic brain infarction. 186 48

Habitual heavy snoring may be considered a preliminary stage of sleep apnea syndrome. This investigation deals with the craniofacial morphology of 51 heavily snoring patients, with and without obstructive sleep apnea, and with 28 healthy control patients. The apnea group showed a reduced posterior airway and a posterior rotation of the mandible. Reduction of the anterior-posterior diameter of the cranial base, maxilla and mandible and vertical reduction of the posterior facial height appeared to be common facial characteristics in both snoring and apnea patients. These findings indicate an anatomical disposition for snoring and apnea.
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PMID:Cephalometric analysis of permanently snoring patients with and without obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. 189 Mar 23

Previous investigators have demonstrated in patients with obstructive sleep apnea that weight reduction results in a decrease in apnea severity. Although the mechanism for this decrease is not clear, we hypothesize that decreases in upper airway collapsibility account for decreases in apnea severity with weight loss. To determine whether weight loss causes decreases in collapsibility, we measured the upper airway critical pressure (Pcrit) before and after a 17.4 +/- 3.4% (mean +/- SD) reduction in body mass index in 13 patients with obstructive sleep apnea. Thirteen weight-stable control subjects matched for age, body mass index, gender (all men), and non-REM disordered breathing rate (DBR) also were studied before and after usual care intervention. During non-REM sleep, maximal inspiratory airflow was measured by varying the level of nasal pressure and Pcrit was determined by the level of nasal pressure below which maximal inspiratory airflow ceased. In the weight loss group, a significant decrease in DBR from 83.3 +/- 31.0 to 32.5 +/- 35.9 episodes/h and in Pcrit from 3.1 +/- 4.2 to -2.4 +/- 4.4 cm H2O (p less than 0.00001) was demonstrated. Moreover, decreases in Pcrit were associated with nearly complete elimination of apnea in each patient whose Pcrit fell below -4 cm H2O. In contrast, no significant change in DBR and a minimal reduction in Pcrit from 5.2 +/- 2.3 to 4.2 +/- 1.8 cm H2O (p = 0.031) was observed in the "usual care" group. We conclude that (1) weight loss is associated with decreases in upper airway collapsibility in obstructive sleep apnea, and that (2) the resolution of sleep apnea depends on the absolute level to which Pcrit falls.
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PMID:Effect of weight loss on upper airway collapsibility in obstructive sleep apnea. 189 85

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) in children is commonly caused by adenotonsillar hypertrophy. The diagnostic criteria of OSAS in children are not so well delineated as in adults. We report the first case of antral choanal polyp presenting as OSAS in a 10-year-old boy that initially presented to the child psychiatry service for behavior disturbance, enuresis, and daytime somnolence. Overnight electroencephalogram sleep study revealed events consistent with OSAS. Multiple inhalant allergies, chronic maxillary sinusitis, and obstructive adenoid hypertrophy were diagnosed by the allergy and otolaryngology services. The child was scheduled for adenoidectomy when his sleep apnea symptoms persisted following antimicrobial therapy. Examination under anesthesia revealed a normal adenoid bed and a large left antral choanal polyp. Polypectomy was performed as dictated by parental consent. Postoperatively treatment with an intranasal steroid was begun. However, polypoid nasal mucosa recurred in 2 months and a Caldwell-Luc procedure was performed. Subjective reports following surgery indicated improvement in daytime irritability, attention, and mood. A follow-up overnight electroencephalogram sleep study confirmed resolution of OSAS.
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PMID:Antral choanal polyp presenting as obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. 189 25


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