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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
The authors review the literature on the oculo-mandibulo-facial syndrome and present the case of a six-year-old boy with congenital cataracts, microphthalmos, nystagmus, failure to thrive, dysmorphic features with a tiny pinched nose, mandibular hypoplasia, microstomia, double chin, chronic
snoring
, recurrent respiratory infections and dental problems. Chronic obstructive
sleep apnoea
with decreased oxygen saturation was present. Optimal medical management of OMFS-patients is described.
...
PMID:A new look at the management of the oculo-mandibulo-facial syndrome. 159 91
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
The aim of this study was twofold: first, to see if the prevalence of the
sleep apnea syndrome
(
SAS
) in a given population could be fairly estimated by our patient questionnaire, mainly based upon the 1979 American Sleep Association definition of
SAS
; and second, to investigate whether the severity of
SAS
could be similarly accurately measured by daytime polysomnography (DPSG), as an alternative to the more demanding all-night polysomnography (NPSG). Of 42 patients consecutively examined due to rhonchopathy, 18 had the clinical diagnosis of
SAS
, which was based on the three symptoms--
snoring
, sleep disturbances and diurnal hypersomnia--if reported to occur habitually. In 11 patients the diagnosis was established by NPSG [apnea index (AI) greater than 10]. However, in only 10 of the 18 cases NPSG indicated the diagnosis giving a positive predictive value of 56%. When comparing DPSG versus NPSG in 36 patients, the AI ranged from -23 to +65, and the mean AI value was found to be twice as high in the former (mean difference 9.0 +/- 18.4; p less than 0.01). The positive predictive value of DPSG was 63% (10/16). Both the self-report and DPSG were burdened with some 25% false-positive results, and DPSG gave far too variable AI values to be reliable in staging the disease. On the other hand, the negative predictive values were high, 96% (23/24) and 100% (20/20), respectively, indicating their usefulness for screening purposes.
...
PMID:Preliminary report: validity of symptom analysis and daytime polysomnography in diagnosis of sleep apnea. 162 Oct 28
Automobile accidents are reported as being overrepresented in those suffering from the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (
SAS
), evident by
snoring
, sleep disturbances and diurnal hypersomnia. An estimation of the prevalence of these symptoms amongst an adult population, predominantly automobile drivers, was assessed by using a one-stage questionnaire procedure. From a national random sample of 1214 persons a weighted reply rate of 76% was achieved.
Snoring
, breath cessations, mid-sleep awakenings, and diurnal hypersomnia were reported in 24, 3.8, 27 and 9.1%, respectively. The maximum prevalence of
SAS
was estimated as 2.8-5.5% among men, aged 30-69 years, depending on definition used. Driving frequency in potential sleep apneics was similar to that of the entire population studied. Diurnal hypersomnia, considered a consequence of
SAS
, was reported as an overall 2.2%, corresponding to 100,000 automobile drivers in Sweden.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea syndrome symptoms and automobile driving in a general population. 162 63
Respiratory disorders in the upper respiratory tract during sleep are most often part of a continuous pathological process of long standing. Schematically, three clinical syndromes with increasing severity are described: breathing with the mouth open,
snoring
and the
sleep apnea syndrome
. These conditions always include a functional maxillofacial perturbation, which may be associated to a constitutional or acquired morphological disorder. Besides the medical approach itself, the treatment sometimes is surgical, always orthopedic. The earlier it is initiated, the more effective, simple and unconstraining it is.
...
PMID:[Respiratory pathology of sleep and the upper airways]. 162 89
Increasing evidence suggests that
snoring
and
sleep apnea
are associated with cerebrovascular diseases. Several other factors may be involved in this association because many established or potential risk factors for stroke are related to
snoring
and
sleep apnea
. These include arterial hypertension, coronary heart disease, age, obesity, smoking, and alcohol consumption. Recent epidemiologic and clinical studies indicate, however, that
snoring
can increase the risk of stroke independently of these confounding factors. Accumulating epidemiologic evidence of long-term harmful effects of the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome appears to be related to increasing vascular morbidity and mortality. Potential mediators among
snoring
, obstructive sleep apneas, and stroke include cardiac arrhythmias and other hemodynamic disturbances, increased levels of catecholamines, and disturbances in cerebral blood flow caused by sleep apneas, as well as hypoxemic periods that may potentiate atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Snoring, sleep apnea syndrome, and stroke. 163 Jun 43
To investigate the impact of sleep-disordered breathing events on daytime hypertension (HT) in patients with increased upper airway resistance during sleep, we studied 191 male snorers aged 49.9 +/- 0.8 years. In 116 of them, an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) above 10--defined as the presence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)--was found; the other 75 subjects had an AHI lower than 10 and were classified as habitual snorers (HSN). Prevalence of HT was not different between OSA (56 of 116 = 48 percent) and HSN (33 of 75 = 44 percent) and there was also no difference in systolic, diastolic, and mean blood pressures between the two groups. Hypertensive OSA patients had higher body mass index (BMI) than normotensive OSA subjects (31.4 +/- 0.7 vs 29.4 +/- 0.6; p less than 0.05), but there was no difference in age, AHI, and nocturnal oxygenation parameters. The same was true for the HSN group, with hypertensive subjects being more obese than normotensive subjects (BMI: 30 +/- 0.8 vs 27.3 +/- 0.8; p less than 0.05), but no difference in age and polysomnographic features. Discriminant analysis with HT as the classification variable and age, BMI, AHI, mean, and lowest nocturnal oxyhemoglobin saturation as independent variables, revealed an independent influence on HT only for BMI (F-prob = 0.001). Thus, our results stand against the hypothesis of a causal relationship between sleep-disordered breathing events and daytime hypertension. We conclude that the high prevalence of HT in male snorers is more directly linked to obesity than to
sleep apnea
, but an independent effect of
snoring
per se cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Systemic hypertension in snorers with and without sleep apnea. 164 15
Although anatomical abnormalities of the upper airway have been recorded in some patients with obstructive
sleep apnoea
(OSA), a muscle tone dysregulation also seems to have an important role in this disorder. Since habitual
snoring
is the initial stage of OSA, the structural characteristics of upper airway muscles (medium pharyngeal constrictor muscle [MPCM]) from 13 men (9 non-snorers and 4 habitual snorers) were studied. MPCM fibre structure in non-snorers was broadly similar to that in normal limb muscles, with the exception that fibre diameters were smaller for all fibre types. Compared with limb muscles, MPCM had a smaller proportion of type IIb fibres and a higher proportion of types I and IIa fibres. MPCM in habitual snorers had an abnormal distribution of fibre types (low percentage of type I and type IIb fibres and high percentage of type IIa fibres) compared with non-snorers (p less than 0.001) and the type IIa fibres were hypertrophic. No myopathic or neurogenic changes were seen. Two possible hypotheses explain the abnormal distribution of fibre types in snorers. First, a constitutionally determined reduction of slow alpha-motor neurons induces an adaptive transformation of type IIb to type IIa fibres and a hypertrophy of type IIa fibres; or, second, motor neurons change their patterns of discharge and, hence, of activation, and modify fibre-type distribution of MPCM as an adaptation to the anatomical characteristic of upper airway and habitual
snoring
.
...
PMID:Muscle fibre type and habitual snoring. 167 53
Sleep-related breathing disorders are associated with considerably impaired vitality and reduced life expectancy. In this respect, a particularly important role is played by obstructive
snoring
and obstructive or mixed
sleep apnoea
. Because of the often underestimated prevalence of sleep-related breathing disorders and their association with hypertension in greater than 50% of patients, it is important to introduce antihypertensive drug therapy that does not exacerbate the effects and the degree of these disorders, and that above all produces an adequate lowering of blood pressure by night. In the present study in 12 patients, it has been shown that the new ACE inhibitor, cilazapril, achieves a good reduction in blood pressure over 24 hours and during all stages of sleep, without any negative influence on the ratio of REM: nonREM sleep. The apnoea index was reduced from 40 (range 12 to 84) to 27 (range 0 to 72) apnoeas per hour of sleep (p less than 0.01). It will be increasingly important to take into account the effects of antihypertensive therapy on other clinical parameters, especially the nocturnal blood pressure profile and its association with sleep-related breathing disorders.
...
PMID:First experience with cilazapril in the treatment of sleep apnoea-related hypertension. 171 71
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