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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this part of the chapter we have used new terminology and developed a new system for classification of sleep disorders in children. We suggest that excessive daytime
sleepiness
should be investigated by clinicians before troubles at school necessitate referral. The narcolepsy-hypersomnia syndrome generally has not been recognized in the pediatric age group. Symptoms of excessive fear of falling asleep need to be viewed in this context.
Sleep apnea
-hypersomnia has received insufficient attention in the American literature. It is a syndrome that affects both adults and children with potentially disastrous cardiovascular and pulmonary complications. The relationship of the
sleep apnea
-hypersomnia syndrome to the sudded infant death syndrome remains speculative, although preliminary results from our longitudinal study have indicated a possible link. Both the narcolepsy-hypersomnia and the
sleep apnea
-hypersomnia syndromes are reviewed in detail. In contrast, we review briefly the NREM dyssomnias, including night terrors, sleepwalking, sleep talking and enuresis. All are well known to clinicians dealing with children, and we have related them to findings emanating from the sleep laboratory. We suggest that they are physiologically rather than psychogenically based and frequently represent immaturities of the central nervous system. Finally, the insomnias of childhood are presented. We emphasize that they are rare, and after ruling out organic conditions and drug-dependency syndromes, cultural styles or family stresses generally account for the majority of complaints.
...
PMID:The pathophysiology of sleep disorders in pediatrics. Part II. Sleep disorders in children. 5 11
A series of 235 consecutive patients refferred to the Stanford University Sleep Disorders Clinic with the complaint of excessive daytime
sleepiness
(EDS) were investigated extensively. A satisfactory final diagnosis involving a consistent syndrome or pathogenic process was made in all but 7 patients. In the course of this work a variety of tests, including prolonged polygraphic monitoring of multiple variables and CSF measurements before and after probenecid ingestion, were utilized. Different syndromes were confirmed (harmonious hypersomnia, subwakefulness syndrome); the definitions of others were clarified and extended (narcolepsy, drug dependency, periodic hypersomnia associated with menstruation, upper airway
sleep apnea
in children). Two new entities were tentatively identified (narcolepsy with
sleep apnea
, the neutral state syndrome). Narcolepsy and upper airway
sleep apnea
accounted for the majority of the cases (199). A strategic schema utilizing specific categories and frequency of occurrence in the case series is presented to improve the diagnosis of the complaint of excessive daytime
sleepiness
by the practicing physician. This case series was analysed in order to develop tentatively a meaningful nosology.
...
PMID:235 cases of excessive daytime sleepiness. Diagnosis and tentative classification. 18 92
A 67-year-old woman with acquired micrognathia developed severe daytime hypersomnia, loud snoring, nocturnal enuresis, encopresis, and hypertension. A polysomnogram demonstrated 564 sleep apneas, primarily obstructive, recurrent hypoxia, a bradytachycardia, and absent stages III, IV, and REM sleep. Endoscopy during sleep revealed recurrent active closure of the upper pharynx associated with loud snoring. A tracheoplasty was done because of severity of symptoms and failure of conservative therapy. Dramatic improvement in
sleepiness
and hypertension occurred within 48 hours. On postoperative night 15 a repeated polysomnogram showed only 23 apneas, no hypoxia or bradytachycardia, and long periods of stage II, IV, and REM sleep. Patients with the hypersomnia-
sleep apnea syndrome
should be provided with a tracheal opening during sleep when severe daytime
somnolence
, cardiac arrhythmias, and hypertension are present.
...
PMID:Hypersomnia-sleep apnea due to micrognathia. Reversal by tracheoplasty. 20 45
Six young male patients with grade I (mild) myotonic dystrophy and a complaint of excessive daytime
sleepiness
were studied during wakefulness and sleep. Pulmonary function tests during wakefulness showed evidence of mild abnormality related to respiratory muscle weakness. During sleep, some patients developed a
sleep apnea syndrome
with high sleep Apnea Indices. There was no relation between hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses during wakefulness and sleep Apnea Indices. But hypoxemia and hypercapnia worsened considerably during REM sleep. Myotonic dystrophy patients with
sleep apnea
presented increased pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures during sleep. It was also during sleep that arrhythmias were observed.
...
PMID:Respiratory and hemodynamic study during wakefulness and sleep in myotonic dystrophy. 22 21
Sleep apnea syndrome
is a constellation of symptoms resulting from recurrent episodes of apnea during sleep. Often the upper airway becomes obstructed during slumber in this disorder. Symptoms relate to sleep deprivation and include morning headaches, daytime
somnolence
, personality changes with deteriorating intellectual capacity, nocturnal enuresis, and sexual dysfunction. Diagnosis is assisted by polysomnographic recordings. Therapy is directed at the cause of obstruction when one can be found, weight loss in massively obese patients, tracheostomy in the symptomatic patient. Four patients with documented
sleep apnea syndrome
are discussed. One patient, a thin adolescent female underwent adenoidectomy without improvement. Two massively obese adult males required tracheostomy with marked amelioration of symptoms. One additional adult male was found to have
sleep apnea
due to severe, acquired micrognathia; he was significantly improved by tracheostomy. All three adult patients were found by endoscopic visualization to have marked pharyngeal soft tissue collapse with inspiration during apneic episodes. Possible causes of pharyngeal collapse are discussed.
...
PMID:Endoscopic findings in sleep apnea syndrome. 23 Nov 20
Six young adult patients with grade I myotonic dystrophy and a complaint of daytime
somnolence
underwent 36-hour polygraphic monitoring, dynamometric and electromyographic studies before and under baclofen (60 mg/daily). Patients with the most severe daytime
sleepiness
had pathologic
Sleep Apnea
Indexes. After 6 weeks' ingestion of baclofen, no subjective or objective effect on patient symptomatology was found.
...
PMID:Baclofen trial in six myotonic dystrophy patients. 35 86
The association of
sleep apnea
with daytime hypersomnolence without obesity, and its potentially lethal cardiopulmonary sequelae, make it crucial that this condition be distinguished from narcolepsy. A patient with retrognathia who had been diagnosed as a narcoleptic for 15 years had the primary complaint of excessive daytime
sleepiness
. Sleep laboratory evaluation showed severe hypoxemia and a mean of 366 upper airway obstructions per night. The patient was treated with a tracheotomy; this resulted in relief of the sleep-related upper airway obstructions, hypoxemia, and hypersomnolence.
...
PMID:Retrognathia and sleep apnea. A life-threatening condition masquerading as narcolepsy. 57 59
Narcolepsy may affect as many as 200,000 Americans. The illness involves a neurologic defect in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness. The chief symptoms are
sleepiness
, inappropriate sleep episodes, and cataplexy. A characteristic history of cataplexy establishes the diagnosis. Narcoleptic patients also frequently complain of hypnagogic hallucinations, sleep paralysis, blackouts (or automatic behavior), and disturbed nocturnal sleep. Narcolepsy usually develops in adolescence and is a life-long illness. Symptoms may also appear in young children who may be misdiagnosed as hyperactive or psychotic. No completely satisfactory treatment is available at the present time. The current treatments of choice are methylphenidate (for
sleepiness
and sleep episodes) and imipramine (for cataplexy). Medication dosages must be adjusted for individual patients. A careful history of the illness can rule out hypothyroidism, hypoglycemia, and epilepsy.
Sleep apnea
is a serious complication of narcolepsy and may be life threatening.
...
PMID:Narcolepsy. Diagnosis and treatment. 105 17
Periodic
sleep apnea
may be due to repeated episodes of upper airway obstruction in patients who have a short thick neck and/or large jowls. Apnea due to complete cessation of breathing may occur to a lesser extent. Anaylsis of the sleep electroencephalogram shows that these patients rarely achieve deep sleep and have less stage 1-REM sleep than normal subjects of comparable age. They are chronically sleep-deprived, a manifestation expressed by daytime
somnolence
, chronic fatigue and often by personality disturbances marked by paranoia, agitated depression and hostility. The definitive diagnosis of this syndrome may be established by monitoring during sleep, the electroencephalogram, measuring abdominal excursions through a mercury-in-Silastic-strain gauge and recording air flow at the nose by means of a thermocouple. As demonstrated by other investigators, chronic hypoventilation during sleep leads to both pulmonary and systemic arterial hypertension, which may produce generalized cardiac enlargement and congestive heart failure. The abnormalities in the periodic
sleep apnea syndrome
are abolished by establishing a patent airway either through tracheostomy or weight reduction.
...
PMID:Periodic sleep apnea: chronic sleep deprivation related to intermittent upper airway obstruction and central nervous system disturbance. 111 91
Very few epidemiological surveys have specifically studied relationships between sleep disturbances and psychiatric diseases. In this review, we preferred to use the classification proposed in 1979 by the Association of Sleep Disorders Centers. It includes four main categories: insomnias, excessive
sleepiness
, troubles of the wake/sleep schedule and parasomnias. Evaluating psychiatric disorders among general populations is easier owing to DSM III and DSM III-R criteria, but there are not equivalent criteria in evaluating sleep disorders. It is almost impossible to realize polysomnographic recordings in large samples, therefore sleep disorders are to be detected by questionnaires. It has been shown that there is a good correlation between self-reports and polysomnographic recordings among clinical and general samples. The prevalence of insomnia, defined as difficulties of initiating and maintaining sleep, is estimated between 9 and 31%. It is higher among women, elderly people, separated and divorced subjects, and low educational levels' groups. It has to be noticed that polysomnographic records of some subjective insomniacs are not different from those of good sleepers, sleep latency excepted. These subjective (and not objective) insomniacs have high scores in anxiety scale, depression scale, or psychologic distress. Insomnia is more frequently noted amongst subjects with psychiatric diagnoses, especially major depressive disorders and anxiety disorders. Depressive disorders are present in 21-40% of insomniacs versus 0-1% of non-insomniacs, and anxiety disorders in 13-24% of insomniacs versus 3-10% of non-insomniacs. In depressive disorders, sleep alterations are frequently noted: they are difficulties of initiating and maintaining sleep, decreasing proportion of slow-wave sleep, decreasing time of REM (rapid eye movement) sleep and REM sleep latency, and increasing density of REM sleep. Of these modifications, the last two ones seem to be specific for depression. The relationships between sleep, aging and depression are more complex than previously noted. For example, differences between depressed and non-depressed subjects depend on the age of the population. The prevalence of hypersomnia is lower than the insomnia's. It varies between 2 and 4%. It is more frequently noted among young people, and never married subjects. Two specific aetiologies must be looked for:
sleep apnea syndrome
and narcolepsy. These diagnoses are respectively found in 45% and 24% of hypersomniacs examined in American Sleep Centers. Hypersomnias are objectived by the Multiple Sleep Latency Test, which measures the physiologic sleep tendency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Sleep disorders in psychiatric diseases. Epidemiological aspects]. 129 83
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