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)

Sleep apnea and obstructive snoring are sleep related breathing disorders (SRBD). Nevertheless, there is only a quantitative difference between snoring and the obstructive form of sleep apnea. Snoring occurs in at least 20% of the population; 50% of the 50 year old male snore. Although in most of the cases only harmless snoring is concerned. It becomes serious if it leads as the independent SRBD "obstructive snoring" to a continuous oxygen desaturation and a sleep disturbance or, if in cases of sleep apnea a postapnoic snoring is concerned. The snoring pattern "loud and irregular" is always a sign for a serious SRBD. Still, no exact statement can be given concerning the frequency of obstructive snoring. However, the prevalence of sleep apnea in men of the mean age group has been determined to 10%. By the so-called sleep apnea syndrome are summarized clinical pictures with symptoms and findings caused by sleep apnea, respectively with those which can be reduced by sufficiently early introduced therapy. Most frequent symptoms and findings are: hypertension, loud and irregular snoring, daytime sleepiness and nocturnal cardiac arrhythmias. Especially hypersomnia has always to be taken seriously. In relation with other symptoms and findings associated with apnea it is always an indication for the examination for sleep apnea and obstructive snoring.
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PMID:[Snoring and sleep apnea syndrome]. 266 55

Athletes have traditionally been considered greater risk takers than their peers. Some research suggests that athletic participation is associated with increased risk behaviors in males but may be protective in females. Still there is significant intersport variability, and some "nonathlete" risk behaviors exceed those of athletes. Motor vehicle accidents, sensation-seeking behaviors that contribute to unintentional injury and violence, alcohol, illicit drug and tobacco use, sexual misadventure, unhealthy dietary habits, and physical inactivity and obesity are major health risk considerations. There is new focus upon the negative health-related consequences of other risk behaviors such as gambling, sleep apnea and obesity, inappropriate medication, energy drink or contaminated supplement use, and depression/suicide. While it is important to look at the prevalence of "risk behaviors in sport," our cautions regarding these behaviors need to be shared with all youth regardless of athletic disposition.
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PMID:Risk behaviors in high school and college sport. 1900 60

This study deals with ECG-based recognition of sleep apnea in epochs of 1 min duration using spectral- and correlation-based features extracted from the modulation of QRS amplitude, respiratory myogram interference and RR intervals. On a database comprising 140 simultaneous recordings of polysomnograms (PSGs) and 8-lead Holter-ECGs, it is shown that a single-parameter ROC threshold classification can achieve high detection rates up to 81.0% sensitivity and 85.6% specificity. Still, individual accuracy may be low, and the improvement employing feature combination by means of second order polynomial classifiers is only marginal. We speculate that individual differences, like co-morbidities, and even intra-individual confounding factors, like nocturnal changes in body position (BP), are major reasons for the difficulties to significantly raise the detection rate using multivariate techniques, which is evident in virtually all papers on that subject. Using the BP information in the PSG, we show a potential benefit for individualized single-feature classifiers by comparing the maximally achievable individual and global accuracy when either one optimal global threshold for the total dataset, individual threshold values for each subject or individual thresholds for each BP are applied. We developed an ECG-based BP segmentation algorithm and finally suggest a potential strategy to derive individually optimized subject-specific threshold values.
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PMID:Steps toward subject-specific classification in ECG-based detection of sleep apnea. 2202 62

Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a common co-morbidity in patients with heart failure (HF). Both its forms - central and obstructive sleep apnea - are highly prevalent in this population. SDB fragments sleep, impairs life quality, worsens exercise tolerance, worsens HF and is an independent predictor of poor prognosis. Still, SDB remains largely undiagnosed. Therefore, early detection of SDB seems to be of primary importance, especially in the presence of new diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) increases left ventricular ejection fraction and stroke volume in virtually all HF patients with obstructive and in 50% with central sleep apnea. For those in whom central sleep apnea is not suppressed by CPAP, a trial of adaptive servoventilation is recommended. Although no randomized, controlled trials have shown improvement in mortality, several observational studies have shown that effective treatment of both forms of sleep apnea with various positive airway pressure devices improves survival of HF patients. Currently, 2 large trials with newer masked based therapies with adaptive servoventilation are in progress. This article is a brief overview of present knowledge, the pathophysiology, diagnostic approach and therapy of SDB.
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PMID:Sleep disordered breathing in patients with heart failure. 2391 52

Sleep apnea increases risk of driving crashes when left untreated. This study examined the driving performance decrements of untreated, undiagnosed sleep apnea drivers compared with healthy controls in a monotonous highway driving simulator task. It was hypothesized that the sleep apnea group would perform worse during a driving simulator test compared with the control group. A significant group by time interaction occurred indicating that sleep apnea participants' performance degraded more quickly over the course of the drive. In contrast with previous studies, this sleep apnea group did not include sleep disorder center patients, but rather community volunteers whose screening indicated a significant apnea/hypopnea index of 15 or greater. There may be inherent differences between patients and nonpatients with sleep apnea, as patients may have a more significant impact on their quality of life, causing them to seek treatment. Still, the results are clear that although the sleep apnea group drove similarly to the control group at the start of the drive, they are sensitive to time on task effects. These results support the need to diagnose and treat sleep apnea.
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PMID:The deterioration of driving performance over time in drivers with untreated sleep apnea. 2685 17