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)

The Prader-Willi syndrome is characterized by infantile hypotonia, early childhood obesity, mental deficiency, short stature, small hands and feet, and hypogonadism. Many patients also have hypersomnolence, experience daytime hypoventilation, and subsequently die prematurely of cardiorespiratory failure. Hypersomnolence and daytime hypoventilation are also common occurrences in the sleep apnea syndrome. For a better understanding of the relationship of sleep to the features of the Prader-Willi syndrome, we retrospectively reviewed five patients (two adults, one adolescent, and two children) with this syndrome who underwent polysomnography. All patients were obese; they had hypersomnolence and daytime hypoxemia, and they nored. In all patients, the apnea plus hypopnea index was less than 10 episodes per hour of sleep. During rapid eye movement sleep, nonapneic reductions in oxyhemoglobin saturation were detected in one adult and in one child. Despite the presence of morbid obesity and a history of snoring, patients with Prader-Willi syndrome seem to have only mild sleep-disordered breathing.
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PMID:Sleep and breathing in patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome. 194 44

A patient with congenital micrognathia, hypersomnia and severe pulmonary hypertension which resulted in sudden death during sleep is described. Hypersomnolence is a well-recognized manifestation of the pickwickian syndrome. A less recognized but similar disorder may affect patients with congenital or acquired micrognathia. The pathogenesis of this syndrome and obstructive sleep apnoea are reviewed. Tracheostomy timeously performed may be life-saving and the value of early resort to this apparently drastic procedure in a high-risk patient is emphasized.
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PMID:Micrognathia, obstructive sleep apnoea and cor pulmonale--a case for tracheostomy. 396 2

We have no information on snoring and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in our population, which is predominantly Chinese. Our perception is that sleep apnea syndrome is more common than the 2-4% prevalence (Young et al., 1993) often quoted, judging from the experience in our sleep disorder unit. We studied the snorers in an adult population in Singapore and then went on to see how many snorers suffer pathological apnea and sleep apnea syndrome. Room partners, 220 of them aged 30-60 years, were interviewed for their observation of snoring among each other. 106 consecutive habitual loud snorers of a similar age group in the same population were studied with polysomnography in our sleep laboratory. An apnea index greater than 5 was considered pathological. 24.09% were loud habitual snorers. 87.5% of loud habitual snorers had significant obstructive apneas on the polysomnogram and 72% of these apneics complained of excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS). Given the clinical observation that all apneics snored, by extrapolating these figures, we guess that sleep apnea syndrome affects about 15% of the population. Multiple Sleep Latency Tests validated EDS in our cases with clinical hypersomnia. Hypersomnolence was significantly related to the poor delta wave sleep. Contrary to what was believed, OSA occurred predominantly in stage 1 and 2 non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep rather than in REM sleep. The frequent arousals prevented sleep going beyond stage 1 and 2.
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PMID:From snoring to sleep apnea in a Singapore population. 1138 77

Relationships between symptoms of hypersomnolence, psychiatric disorders, and hypersomnia disorders (i.e., narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia) are complex and multidirectional. Hypersomnolence is a common complaint across mood disorders; however, patients suffering from mood disorders and hypersomnolence rarely have objective daytime sleepiness, as assessed by the current gold standard test, the Multiple Sleep Latency Test. An iatrogenic origin of symptoms of hypersomnolence, and sleep apnea syndrome must be considered in a population of psychiatric patients, often overweight and treated with sedative drugs. On the other hand, psychiatric comorbidities, especially depression symptoms, are often reported in patients with hypersomnia disorders, and an endogenous origin cannot be ruled out. A great challenge for sleep specialists and psychiatrists is to differentiate psychiatric hypersomnolence and a central hypersomnia disorder with comorbid psychiatric symptoms. The current diagnostic tools seem to be limited in that condition, and further research in that field is warranted.
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PMID:Hypersomnolence, Hypersomnia, and Mood Disorders. 2824 64