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

A patient who presented with primary fibromyalgia syndrome (PFS) was found to have sleep apnea. Since frequent wakening and nonrestorative sleep are prominent clinical complaints in both disorders, we hypothesized an etiologic relationship. A subsequent clinical survey of 11 additional sleep apneics revealed that 3 (27%) fulfilled proposed criteria for PFS. This was significantly greater than local and literature reported studies of nonrheumatologic patients and was comparable to reported prevalence of fibromyalgia in rheumatologic referral populations. A blinded sleep physiology study of 7 patients with PFS revealed a significantly increased percentage of transitional sleep and increased frequency of miniarousals/h, but no significant evidence of occult sleep apnea compared to matched normal controls. The frequent arousals of sleep apnea may be associated with fibromyalgia in some patients but do not explain the sleep disorder of PFS.
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PMID:Sleep, sleep apnea and the fibromyalgia syndrome. 346 59

Advancements in sleep research have led to the development of new standards of what is normal sleep and arousal and new diagnostic tests for the detection of sleep disorders. Millions of adults have frequent or chronic complaints about the quality and quantity of their sleep. Sleep complaints increase with increasing age and are more common in women than in men and in women over 45 than in younger women. Sedative-hypnotic drugs are taken more frequently by women than men, and the incidence of use increases with increasing age. Studies of sleep and sleep disturbances during the perimenopausal period suggest that difficulty falling asleep and frequent nocturnal awakenings result from hormonal changes, vasomotor symptoms, and possibly psychologic factors. Other causes for sleep complaints in menopausal and postmenopausal women are occult sleep disorders, especially periodic leg movements in sleep and sleep apnea syndrome. Sleeping pills are inappropriate for most patients with sleep complaints. If sleep difficulties persist after a trial of good sleep hygiene, further evaluation at a sleep disorders center is indicated.
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PMID:Sleep disorders. 354 46

Symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea, a potentially life-threatening disorder, include excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep attacks, nocturnal breath cessation, and snorting and gasping sounds. These symptoms usually become manifest before age 40 and cluster within a few years. Most patients are obese, hypertensive men who eventually develop cardiovascular abnormalities. If sleep apnea is suspected based on clinical information, a sleep laboratory evaluation is indicated. For severe obstructive sleep apnea, tracheostomy is the most effective treatment. Narcolepsy, another sleep disorder, is a life-long and usually disabling condition. In most narcoleptic patients the first symptoms develop during childhood or adolescence, yet many years pass before the proper diagnosis is made. The presence of sleep attacks together with auxiliary symptoms, particularly cataplexy, is diagnostic. Treatment of narcolepsy includes stimulants in combination with therapeutic naps for sleep attacks and tricyclic drugs for cataplexy.
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PMID:Sleep disorders: sleep apnea and narcolepsy. 354 95

To evaluate the effect of intermittent hypoxemia on neuropsychological functioning, neuropsychological tests were administered to 14 sleep apnea patients, a control group of 10 patients with other disorders of excessive somnolence, and another control group of 14 healthy volunteers. The sleep disorder groups were matched on two measures of sleepiness. It was found that sleep apnea patients performed significantly worse than both controls on 7 of 14 neuropsychological measures and on a rating of global neuropsychological impairment. The overall level of performance reflected only moderate impairment. Within the sleep apnea group, hypoxemia severity was significantly correlated with deficits on measures of motor and perceptual-organizational ability.
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PMID:Neuropsychological dysfunction in sleep apnea. 362 88

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.
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PMID:Sleep disorders in the elderly: rationale for clinical awareness. 367 42

Patients with a primary diagnosis of narcolepsy or idiopathic CNS hypersomnia seen at Stanford University Sleep Disorders Clinic over a 5-year period were studied retrospectively. The two patient groups were compared with respect to blood pressure, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) psychological profile, nocturnal sleep structure, prevalence and severity of sleep apnea and periodic leg movements in sleep, and daytime sleep tendency. Narcoleptic patients tended to have higher blood pressure, higher prevalence of abnormally elevated MMPI scores, more abbreviated and more disrupted sleep at night, and greater daytime sleep tendency. Sleep apnea and periodic leg movements were more prevalent in narcoleptic patients, but only periodic leg movements in sleep were more prevalent in narcoleptic patients than in the general population. Periodic leg movements during REM sleep were observed in more than one-third of narcoleptic patients, which may be an important pathophysiologic feature of this disorder.
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PMID:Comparative polysomnographic study of narcolepsy and idiopathic central nervous system hypersomnia. 370 48

A review of the sleep of 31 patients 45 years old or older undergoing nocturnal penile tumescence studies showed that 19 had a previously undiagnosed sleep disorder. Of the patients 9 had periodic leg movements in sleep, 9 had sleep apnea and 1 had both disorders. In 10 of these patients the sleep disorders affected nocturnal penile tumescence by disrupting sleep and causing brief periods of detumescence, movement artifacts and delays in the tumescing phase of nocturnal penile tumescence. These disruptions resulted in an apparently abnormal nocturnal penile tumescence that appeared as if the patient had difficulty in achieving or maintaining an erection. The nocturnal penile tumescence disruptions may have reflected only a disruption of the necessary conditions for normal nocturnal penile tumescence to occur, namely adequate sleep and rapid eye movement sleep. The results strongly suggest that failure to measure concurrent sleep parameters and screen for occult sleep disorders could result in the incorrect diagnosis of abnormal nocturnal penile tumescence.
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PMID:Problems in the interpretation of nocturnal penile tumescence studies: disruption of sleep by occult sleep disorders. 373 35

Parafunctional activity (toothgrinding, toothclenching and bruxism) is a common problem which may lead to masticatory muscle and temporomandibular joint pain, and may result from sleep arousal or disturbances. Sleep apnea is another common sleep disorder which results in disrupted sleep architecture and frequent arousals. Because sleep apnea leads to sleep arousals, and because sleep arousals are thought to result in increased parafunctional activity, we undertook the present study to determine the relationship between sleep apnea and parafunctional activity. We were also interested in assessing the effects of sleep posture on sleep disordered breathing and parafunctional activity. We prospectively studied 24 patients who were referred to the clinical sleep apnea laboratory for study. They underwent standard nocturnal polysomnographic examination; in addition, masticatory activity was measured with a masseter electromyogram. Patients slept in the supine and lateral decubitus positions. Nocturnal clenching was slightly higher in patients with sleep apnea than those without (12.2 vs 7.6 clenches/hr, p = 0.18), and there was a correlation between the clench index (CI) and apnea plus hypopnea index (A + HI) by linear regression (r = 0.49, p less than 0.05). There were significant falls in both the A + HI (64.4 +/- 28.8 vs 36.5 +/- 36.7, p = 0.02) and CI (12.5 +/- 12.1 vs 7.0 +/- 8.6, p = 0.04) in the lateral decubitus vs supine sleeping positions. We conclude that there is an association between obstructive sleep apnea and parafunctional activity, that sleep position affects the incidence of both sleep disordered breathing and parafunctional activity, and that analysis of apneas and hypopneas in both supine and lateral decubitus sleeping positions may be helpful.
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PMID:Effect of sleep position on sleep apnea and parafunctional activity. 374 57

Twenty-six patients with sleep apnea had neuropsychologic testing prior to nocturnal sleep study in a sleep disorders clinic. The cognitive functioning of patients who had sleep apnea with associated hypoxemia was compared to nonhypoxemic patients with sleep apnea. The patients who had sleep apnea with hypoxemia had more severe cognitive impairment than those with sleep apnea without hypoxemia. The hypoxemic patients with sleep apnea had significantly poorer cognitive functioning on four of eight tests (p less than 0.05). In addition, the patients who had sleep apnea with hypoxemia had mean performance scores in the impaired range on measures of attention, concentration, complex problem-solving, and short-term recall of verbal and spatial information. In contrast, the patients who had sleep apnea without hypoxemia had no mean performance score in the impaired range. The degree of hypoxemia during sleep and wakefulness significantly correlated with the degree of overall cognitive impairment as rated by a neuropsychologist; however, measures of sleep fragmentation did not significantly correlate with overall cognitive impairment in patients with sleep apnea. We conclude that patients who have sleep apnea with associated hypoxemia have cognitive impairment which is more severe than those with sleep apnea without hypoxemia.
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PMID:Cognitive impairment in patients with obstructive sleep apnea and associated hypoxemia. 376 69

In 1982 facilities for investigation of patients with sleep disorders were established at Auckland Hospital on a trial basis. Twenty patients with the obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome had been investigated and treated by the end of 1983. All were advised to avoid alcohol and sedatives and the obese patients were encouraged to lose weight. In the more severely affected patients either nasal continuous positive airway pressure or tracheostomy was used. The method of diagnosis and treatment are discussed.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnoea in Auckland: diagnosis and treatment. 386 52


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