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)

Respiratory complications occur in advanced multiple sclerosis (MS) but may also complicate acute relapses earlier in the disease. We present 19 patients with MS who developed respiratory complications at a mean of 5.9 (range 1-12) yrs after the onset of neurological symptoms. Fourteen patients developed severe respiratory insufficiency presenting with a combination of reduced forced vital capacity (FVC), hypoxaemia or hypercapnia (12 patients) and respiratory arrest (four patients). Two patients presented with apneustic breathing, one with paroxysmal hyperventilation, one with obstructive sleep apnoea and one with bulbar weakness leading to aspiration pneumonia. Respiratory muscle weakness was a major factor in 14 patients (predominantly diaphragm involvement in six), bulbar weakness in seven patients, impaired voluntary control in three and impaired automatic control in three. Twelve patients received mechanical respiratory support of whom seven have subsequently died. The methods of support used were intermittent positive pressure ventilation (nine patients), iron lung (three), cuirass (two) and rocking bed (one). Six patients were maintained on respiratory support until they died after intervals varying from 24 h to 6 yrs (mean 17.7 mths). Five patients received temporary ventilation for between 6 d and 42 d: of these four remain alive at up to 4 yrs and one died after 16 yrs. One patient remains on domiciliary nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (IPPV) after 1 yr.
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PMID:Respiratory involvement in multiple sclerosis. 160 78

The pathogenesis of obesity hypoventilation is incompletely understood. We investigated 505 patients with sleep apnoea in respect of determinants that correlate with chronic hypercapnia. 14 patients (2.8 per cent) exhibited daytime hypercapnia (PCO2 greater than or equal to 45 mmHg). Compared with the entire group of patients, these patients showed heavier overweight (p less than 0.001) and their nightly respiratory dysregulation defined by the apnoea index was more severe (p less than 0.001). If these patients were compared with 14 normocapnic controls matched for apnoea index, weight and age, there was no difference in respect of lung function data. We conclude that overweight and the severity of sleep apnoea are determinants that predispose to chronic alveolar hypoventilation.
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PMID:[Which factors promote chronic alveolar hypoventilation in patients with obstructive sleep apnea?]. 186 1

Arterial blood gas analysis was performed before and after 60 to 90 s of voluntary hyperventilation in 27 consecutive patients with occlusive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) and daytime hypercapnia. The percentage of fall in PaCO2 from baseline was examined in relationship to age, body mass index, sleep-disordered breathing indices, and pulmonary function variables. In 14 subjects without airflow obstruction, only one individual could not voluntarily hyperventilate into the normal range, whereas 6 of 13 subjects with airflow obstruction could not hyperventilate to eucapnia. The average percentage of fall in PaCO2 was 16 mm Hg (SEM = 1.3 mm Hg). The percentage of fall in PaCO2 correlated significantly with FEV1/FVC ratio (r = 0.47, p = 0.01) and with FEV1 (r = 0.5, p = 0.008). Although the baseline PaCO2 did not correlate with FEV1, the posthyperventilation PaCO2 did (r = 0.54, p = 0.003). Voluntary hyperventilation studies herein suggest a predominant role for impairment of ventilatory control in the maintenance of hypercapnia in OSA since a fall of PaCO2 into the normal range can usually be obtained. The correlation between the percentage of fall in PaCO2 and spirometric measures of respiratory mechanics, as well as the inability of some subjects to normalize the PaCO2 voluntarily suggests an added role for respiratory mechanical impairment in obesity hypoventilation.
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PMID:Voluntary hyperventilation in obesity hypoventilation. 193 91

Sleep apnea and other respiratory diseases produce hypoxemia and hypercapnia, factors that adversely affect skeletal muscle performance. To examine the effects of these chemical alterations on force production by an upper airway dilator muscle, the contractile and endurance characteristics of the geniohyoid muscle were examined in situ during severe hypoxia (arterial PO2 less than 40 Torr), mild hypoxia (PO2 45-65 Torr), and hypercapnia (PCO2 55-80 Torr) and compared with hyperoxic-normocapnic conditions in anesthetized cats. Muscles were studied at optimal length, and contractile force was assessed in response to supramaximal electrical stimulation of the hypoglossal nerve (n = 7 cats) or geniohyoid muscle (n = 2 cats). There were no significant changes in the twitch kinetics or force-frequency curve of the geniohyoid muscle during hypoxia or hypercapnia. However, the endurance of the geniohyoid, as reflected in the fatigue index (ratio of force at 2 min to initial force in response to 40-Hz stimulation at a duty cycle 0.33), was significantly reduced by severe hypoxia but not by hypercapnia or mild hypoxia. In addition, the downward shift in the force-frequency curve after the repetitive stimulation protocol was greater during hypoxia than hyperoxia, especially at higher frequencies. In conclusion, the ability of the geniohyoid muscle to maintain force output during high levels of activation is adversely affected by severe hypoxia but not mild hypoxia or hypercapnia. However, none of these chemical perturbations affected muscle contractility acutely.
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PMID:Effects of hypoxia and hypercapnia on geniohyoid contractility and endurance. 193 46

The health risks of obesity increase with its severity and reach significance at a weight greater than 20% above optimal, by using life insurance tables, or at a body mass index greater than 27. Risks include hypertension, insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, hypertriglyceridemia, low high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, and, in some studies, high total-and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol. There is an increased mortality from endometrial cancer in women and from colorectal cancer in men. Chronic hypoxia and hypercapnia, sleep apnea, gout, and degenerative joint disease can occur with more severe obesity. The distribution of body fat is directly related to these health risks. Abdominal obesity is more dangerous than gluteal-femoral obesity because the amount of intraabdominal fat seems to determine much of the increased peril; therefore, risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke, hypertension, and diabetes increase with abdominal obesity, even independently of total fat mass.
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PMID:Health implications of obesity. 203 92

The distribution of symptoms, physiologic responses, and upper airway structure in members of one family with three generations of subjects with sleep apnea (SA) is reported. Questionnaire data were obtained from ten family members (ages 7 to 66 years), overnight sleep studies were performed in nine subjects, and ventilatory responses to hyperoxic hypercapnia and to eucapnic hypoxia and cephalometry were obtained in five subjects. All ten family members reported habitual snoring or nighttime snorting/gasping; five of ten family members also reported excessive daytime sleepiness. All studied subjects except for a pregnant woman had greater than ten apneas/hypopneas per hour. Ventilatory responses to hypoxia were markedly reduced in all five subjects studied (less than or equal to 0.51 L/min/SaO2); hypercapnic responses were reduced in three of five subjects (less than or equal to 0.61 L/min/mm Hg CO2). No subject was morbidly obese (body mass index less than 29 kg/m2) or demonstrated retrognathia. The posterior airway space was reduced in three subjects, and the mandibular to hyoid distance was increased in four subjects. The two subjects with the longest soft palates and the most inferiorly displaced hyoids had the most severe sleep disorder. Sleep apnea was present, albeit less profound, in the one subject with normal anatomy who had an abnormal hypoxic ventilatory response. The distribution of these physiologic and anatomic measurements in this family provides further support for a genetic basis for SA, and suggests that the disorder may occur as a result of interactions between ventilatory control abnormalities and anatomic risk factors.
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PMID:A family study of sleep apnea. Anatomic and physiologic interactions. 239 35

The possible role of ventilatory control in relation to sleep apnea has not yet been clarified. We investigated the relationship between awake ventilatory drives to hypoxia and hypercapnia and sleep-disordered breathing in 21 subjects with sleep apnea syndrome. The awake hypoxic ventilatory drive, which was evaluated by occlusion pressure responses, was inversely correlated with the magnitude of maximal oxygen desaturation during sleep as well as the ratio of duration with more than 4 and 10% oxygen desaturation to total sleep time. On the other hand, the awake hypercapnic ventilatory drive was not correlated with these parameters of sleep desaturation. Apnea index and duration were not correlated with the degree of hypoxic or hypercapnic ventilatory drive, respectively. Our study concluded that sleep desaturation is better correlated with hypoxic ventilatory drive than with hypercapnic ventilatory drive in patients with sleep apnea syndrome. These results are different from the results obtained in the patients with COPD in our previous study.
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PMID:Abnormal breathing during sleep and chemical control of breathing during wakefulness in patients with sleep apnea syndrome. 249 71

The effects of oxygen administration were studied in 10 patients with severe obstructive lung disease. Sleep variable and gas exchanges were measured during two nights: one when they were breathing environmental air, the other when they were receiving oxygen. Carbon dioxide saturation and partial pressure measured by the transcutaneous method were continuously recorded. Sleep was perturbed in all patients, but despite wide interindividual variations its amount and quality were improved by oxygen. None of the patients had sleep apnoea syndrome. Oxygen administration was accompanied by a nocturnal increase in carbon dioxide pressure that was about twice as high as that observed under environmental air. Thus, in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease without concomitant infection suppression of the hypoxic stimulus by oxygen therapy seems to result in an increase in carbon dioxide partial pressure identical with the increase produced by sleep alone. Correlations between diurnal and nocturnal oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide partial pressure indicate that patients with the highest degree of hypoxia and hypercapnia in daytime have the most severe nocturnal blood gas disorders.
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PMID:[Chronic obstructive bronchopneumopathies. Changes in carbon dioxide pressure during sleep in environmental air and with oxygen]. 252 37

The CSF pressure was measured continuously at the lumbar level during nocturnal sleep in 3 patients with sleep apnea hypersomnia syndrome. Nocturnal sleep was very unstable with frequent episodes of obstructive sleep apnea. When the patients were awake and relaxed in the supine position, their CSF pressure was stable and within the normal range. Episodic marked elevations of CSF pressure occurred frequently during sleep, and each elevation was preceded and accompanied by an episode of sleep apnea or hypopnea. Significant correlations were found between the duration of apneic episodes and increase of CSF pressure, and between decrease of SaO2 or TcPO2 and increase of CSF pressure. The duration of sleep apnea was longer, increase of CSF pressure was greater, and decreases of SaO2 and TcPO2 were more marked during REM sleep than during NREM sleep. It is suggested that the frequent marked episodic elevations of CSF pressure are caused by an increase in the intracranial vascular volume occurring mainly in response to transient hypercapnia and hypoxia, which are induced by pulmonary hypoventilation during the episodes of sleep apnea.
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PMID:Marked episodic elevation of cerebrospinal fluid pressure during nocturnal sleep in patients with sleep apnea hypersomnia syndrome. 257 29

During the last years, medical interest has focused on sleep related diseases, especially the sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and the nocturnal breathing abnormalities associated with broncho-pulmonary diseases. It now appears that SAS is far more prevalent than previously believed. In this review article we present the clinical features, the investigations and the current therapeutic methods. We also discuss the recent developments in our understanding of the SAS pathophysiology and their implications in the disease's management. Clinical importance of sleep related disorders of breathing is appreciated when one looks at some of the secondary effects including hypertension, angina pectoris, cardiac insufficiency and worsening of a broncho-pulmonary disease (hypoxemia, hypercapnia); these are associated with a high degree of morbidity. The recent advent of ambulatory screening systems allows an easier evaluation of patients at risk, such as obese or hypertensive snorers and patients with hypersomnolence; then the diagnostic polysomnographic studies can be reserved for subjects in whom home recording is abnormal. A precise and early diagnosis is important to allow the initiation of treatment such as Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) or naso-pharyngeal surgery.
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PMID:[The sleep apnea syndrome. A general review]. 265 45


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