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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to assess the complications of
sleep apnea
, we have reviewed a data base of 619 consecutive admissions to a university sleep disorders center. Although patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) described more subjective
sleepiness
than patients with central
sleep apnea
(CSA) or primary snoring (PS), the multiple sleep latency test (MSLT) indicated similar levels of physiologic
sleepiness
in the two apneic groups, which was greater than among those with PS. There was no significant relationship between individual subjective estimates of habitual
sleepiness
and the MSLT values. Among the OSA patients the mean minimum arterial oxygen desaturation during REM sleep accounted for 65 percent of the variance of the mean sleep latency on the MSLT, with an additional, smaller, contribution of the disordered breathing rate per hour. Subjective reports of
sleepiness
were associated with sleep efficiency and the number of disordered breathing events in NREM sleep. Patients with OSA or CSA had similar diastolic blood pressures and frequencies of history of treatment for hypertension, which were significantly higher in OSA than in the PS group. In the OSA group the absolute minimum arterial oxygen desaturation during NREM sleep was the most significant contributor to waking diastolic blood pressure, with an additional small contribution by weight. A history of treatment for hypertension was most strongly associated with weight, without significant additional contributions by measures of disordered breathing events or oxygen desaturation; however, weight was highly intercorrelated with measures of the apnea/hypopnea index and minimum arterial oxygen desaturation. In summary, these data support recent findings which show a close relation of obesity to a history of hypertension in OSA, and extend to this group a previous observation that in regular heavy snorers, there may be a disparity between levels of physiologic and subjective
sleepiness
.
...
PMID:Sleepiness and hypertension in obstructive sleep apnea. 155 54
Upper airway obstruction in children caused by tonsillar and adenoidal hypertrophy is an indication for tonsillectomy alone or with adenoidectomy. In most children this will cure
sleep apnoea
, snoring, daytime
sleepiness
and other symptoms.
...
PMID:Snoring children, sleep apnoea, and tonsillectomy. 155 97
Two hundred one patients diagnosed as having obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) were interviewed 12-24 months after their evaluation regarding those daytime symptoms associated with
sleep apnea
:
sleepiness
, fatigue, impaired memory, and snoring. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) was the treatment most often used by severe
sleep apnea
patients, and this improved daytime alertness in 84% of the patients. Patients with moderate obstructive sleep apnea often had surgery which led to 85% reporting improved daytime alertness. Patients with mild obstructive sleep apnea usually were treated with weight loss or changing sleep position and also improved 64% and 66%. Patients who declined or failed treatment did not improve. Guidelines for the treatment of
sleep apnea
are suggested.
...
PMID:Treatment outcome of sleep apnea. 158 4
A 71-year-old man was noted to habitually snore loudly at night and have a predisposition to
somnolence
during the daytime. While dozing during the day, he developed cardiac arrest at the time when snoring stopped, and was resuscitated. By means of a respiration monitor, he was diagnosed as having
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
) with a combination of obstructive, central, and mixed type. However, neither respiratory insufficiency nor cardiac insufficiency was observed, and there were no abnormal findings on laboratory tests and bronchoscopy.
SAS
complicated by cardiac arrest is usually seen in cases with concomitant symptoms such as excessive obesity, hypertension, arrhythmia, right heart insufficiency, secondary polycythemia, or mental disorder. The present case abruptly developed cardiac arrest in the absence of such symptoms. This case therefore suggests the importance of screening tests using a respiration monitor during sleep in subjects who have a loud snore or a predisposition to
somnolence
during the daytime. Although treatment with UPPP alone had no noticeable effect, UPPP treatment combined with sleeping in the lateral position was effective in the present case. The efficacy rate of UPPP has been reported to be 50 to 60%. The early establishment of a method for precise evaluation of the site of obstruction as well as criteria for appropriate application of UPPP are urgently required.
...
PMID:[A resuscitated case of sleep apnea syndrome with cardiac arrest]. 160 64
Sleep apnoea
and hypopnoea have been reported in myotonic dystrophy, but it is unclear whether this is simply attributable to the respiratory muscle weakness which is common in this condition. We therefore investigated whether breathing and oxygenation during sleep were more abnormal in patients with myotonic dystrophy than in patients with non-myotonic muscle weakness. Seven subjects were studied in each of three groups: normal controls, myotonic dystrophy and non-myotonic weakness. Patients in the latter group were chosen to represent a similar range of severity of respiratory muscle weakness to those with myotonic dystrophy. Detailed polysomnography was performed; the severity of breathing disorders during sleep was quantified in terms of the frequencies of apnoea and hypopnoea and the degree of arterial desaturation. The myotonic patients showed more frequent apnoea and hypopnoea and more severe desaturation than the other two groups; the results in the non-myotonic patients were generally intermediate. The results suggest that abnormal breathing during sleep is common in myotonic dystrophy and is not due solely to the direct effects of respiratory muscle weakness.
Somnolence
, which is a well recognized symptom of myotonic dystrophy, was not clearly attributable to the
sleep apnoea
/hypopnoea syndrome nor to abnormal sleep architecture in the myotonic patients.
...
PMID:Breathing during sleep in patients with myotonic dystrophy and non-myotonic respiratory muscle weakness. 167 61
"Tiredness", often cited in civil and penal responsibilities secondary to car accidents, hides neurophysiological phenomena which must now be taken into account. The problems of watchfulness in car-driving, is
sleepiness
, are indeed linked to a genuine disorder in the sleep-wake rythm and attention should be drawn to them in medico-legal cases. Investigations and clinical examinations concerning 110 experts' reports confirm the role played by sleep' disorders in the occurrence of car accidents. Prevention in actually possible. Early detection can take place at various levels and concerns general practitioners, specialists of industrial medicine and specialists for driving tests. In France, the list of diseases associated with, and retraining of a driving license refer only to concentration disorders induced by drug administration, but do not mention sleep pathologies (
sleep apnea syndrome
, narcolepsy, etc). What is the responsibility of a driver who ignores or says nothing about a sleep pathology from which he is suffering? Is it really necessary to include these pathologies on such a list? It could be more useful to make a large audience; including children, aware of the physiology and pathology of sleep. It appears, from experts' reports, that the management of the problem requires a "driving hygiene".
...
PMID:[Drowsiness and traffic accidents. Importance of diagnosis]. 167 84
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.
...
PMID:Studies in the genetics of obstructive sleep apnea. Familial aggregation of symptoms associated with sleep-related breathing disturbances. 173 54
A 56-year-old male was admitted because of respiration arrest during sleep, and precordial crushing sensation which repeatedly occurred early in the morning. He had been hypertensive and aware of daytime
sleepiness
for ten years. After admission, all night polysomnography was recorded a total of four times. Apnea index was 37.5 times/hour, and central type apnea was predominant. The diagnosis of
sleep apnea syndrome
was made. In the early morning of the fourteenth day after admission, the patient developed anterior chest pain associated with ST elevation in leads II, III, and aVF of the electrocardiogram. Thus, the case was thought to be complicated by variant angina. There were no anginal attacks during the all night polysomnography recordings. However, a causal relationship between the
sleep apnea
and variant anginal attacks was suspected. Since both the
sleep apnea
and the variant anginal attacks tended to occur during the stages of REM sleep, and they are both related to changes in activity of the autonomic nervous system. It was considered that hypoxemia following
sleep apnea
and/or the hyperventilation after the apneic episodes might be the cause of the variant anginal attacks.
...
PMID:[A case of sleep apnea syndrome with variant angina]. 180 88
In order to determine whether the clinical features of obstructive
sleep apnoea
(OSA) are the same in men and women we reviewed the records of 22 women with OSA. The women were matched with 44 men of similar age (+/- 5 years) and frequency of respiratory events (less than or equal to 15/hr, 16-40/hr, 41-70/hr and greater than 70/hr). The degree of daytime
somnolence
was similar in men and women. Women are more likely than men to complain of morning fatigue and morning headache, and less likely to report restless sleep or to have been told of apnoea during sleep. Difficulty initiating sleep (DIS) was twice as common in women as in men (p less than 0.05). Most of these differences were also seen when women and men who snored but did not have OSA were compared. Arterial hypertension was less common in women (3/22) than in men (18/44), (p less than 0.001). More striking than the differences between men and women in the prevalence of single symptoms was the existence of a subgroup of women (9/22) with no complaint of either apnoea, choking arousals or restless sleep, and normal blood pressure, complaining only of fatigue and morning headache, and in three cases DIS as well. We concluded that OSA may be commoner in women than previous reports suggest, and that the clinical features may be misleading in women.
...
PMID:Differences in the symptoms of men and women with obstructive sleep apnoea. 181 45
To determine its predictive value, polysomnography was performed on 14 snorers with
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
) before and 3 months after uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP). In the 8 patients considered as cured (less than 10 apneas per hour after UPPP), total apnea index (TAI) decreased from 29.7 +/- 22.6 to 4.9 +/- 3.5. Rapid eye movement sleep (REM) increased from 10.9 +/- 3.6 to 14 +/- 5.7% of the total sleep period (TSP). In the 6 uncured patients, TAI decreased from 59.7 +/- 15.7 to 32 +/- 15.7 and REM increased from 7.7 +/- 5.6 to 15.8 +/- 7.2% of TSP. Snoring and
drowsiness
decreased in both cured and uncured patients. A presurgical apnea index less than 40 seems to be a reliable predictor of successful UPPP. The association of obstructive apnea with either central apnea or mixed apnea was not a factor of poor prognosis. Better sleeping could explain in part the clinical improvement in both cured and uncured patients, but postoperative polysomnography is needed to detect asymptomatic
SAS
.
...
PMID:Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty in snorers with sleep apneas: predictive value of presurgical polysomnography. 186 51
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