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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (sleep apnea)
8,000 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sleep apnea and PLMS are extremely prevalent in the elderly. The subjective reports of poor sleep, insomnia, snoring, and excessive daytime sleepiness should not be taken lightly and should not be assumed to be a normal sign of aging. These problems may be interrelated and may be symptoms of the sleep disorders discussed above. Physicians and gerontologists need to become more sensitive to the special problems and needs related to sleep disorders in the geriatric population.
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PMID:Epidemiology of sleep disorders. 266 16

This investigation examined the diagnostic value of polysomnography (PSG) for evaluating disorders of initiating and maintaining sleep (DIMS). The sample consisted of 100 outpatients who presented to the Duke Sleep Disorders Center with a complaint of chronic insomnia. All patients were given comprehensive medical, psychiatric, behavioral, and ambulatory PSG evaluations. Sleep disorder diagnoses were assigned using the criteria of the Association of Sleep Disorders Centers. Overall, PSG yielded important diagnostic information in 65% of the sample: 34% were given a primary sleep disorder diagnosis that was heavily dependent on PSG data [periodic movements of sleep (PMS) = 25%, apnea = 3%, and subjective insomnia = 6%]; 15% were given a secondary diagnosis of one of these three disorders; and PSG ruled out suspected PMS in 9% and sleep apnea in 7% of the sample. Patients greater than 40 years of age had a significantly higher rate of positive PSG findings than younger patients. Using only the clinical exam, two experienced sleep clinicians were able to predict only 14 of 25 PMS cases and one of three cases of sleep apnea. Based on these data, we suggest using PSG routinely with older insomniacs and with younger patients who fail initial treatment.
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PMID:Polysomnographic assessment of DIMS: empirical evaluation of its diagnostic value. 276 87

Insomnia is a disorder of initiation and maintenance of sleep that results in daytime somnolence. The differential diagnosis of the various forms of insomnia is based primarily on the history, including information from the sleeping partner. The possibility of underlying depression or sleep apnea must be given consideration in every patient with insomnia, because inappropriate therapy may be dangerous in these instances. In general, the benzodiazepines have supplanted the traditional hypnotics in the treatment of insomnia.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of insomnia. 288 77

Although the initial sleep disorders classifications provided a framework for categorizing diagnoses, these early instruments had a number of limitations. Among their shortcomings were a lack of specific diagnostic criteria, limited clinical validation, and an overreliance on sleep laboratory findings. As a result, many of the diagnoses were not only poorly substantiated, but they lacked clinical relevance. Also, because of a fusing of diagnoses, a causal relationship was implied that may have been nonexistent and could misdirect the treatment focus. The ICD-10 represents a clinically based diagnostic classification. Furthermore, this classification system includes diagnostic criteria and encourages multiple diagnoses for a more complete description of the patient's clinical presentation. In addition, the ICD-10 allows for differentiation of psychogenic, developmental, and organic factors. Finally, it can be fully applied in the office setting, which allows physicians to maximize their interviewing and assessment skills to complete the diagnoses and subsequent treatment plans. Thus, this classification system strongly reinforces the doctor-patient relationship. It also facilitates consideration of the entire scope of the patient's problems in a truly biopsychosocial perspective. The prevalence of insomnia ranges across studies from 20 to 30% of the adult population. Before adulthood, its prevalence is below 2%. About 5% of adults complain of excessive daytime sleepiness. Among the conditions of excessive daytime sleepiness, narcolepsy has a prevalence of 0.1% and sleep apnea not more than 1% in the general adult population. Nightmares have a prevalence of about 5% in adulthood and 20% in childhood. Sleepwalking and night terrors have a prevalence of less than 1% in adulthood and 15 and 5%, respectively, in childhood.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nosology and prevalence of sleep disorders. 333 58

Within the context of the comprehensive treatment of sleep disorders, which includes medical, neurologic, psychiatric, and social interventions, use of medication is often indicated. Among the three benzodiazepine hypnotics that are available in the United States for the treatment of insomnia, flurazepam is effective for both sleep induction and maintenance, and it retains most of its efficacy over a 4-week period of nightly administration; temazepam is effective only for sleep maintenance, and triazolam improves both sleep induction and maintenance with initial but not with continued administration. Rebound phenomena are more frequent and intense with the more rapidly eliminated drug, triazolam, and to a lesser degree with temazepam. Also, with triazolam, certain behavioral side effects, such as amnesia and psychotic-like symptoms, have been reported. With flurazepam, which is a slowly eliminated benzodiazepine, daytime sedation is more frequent than with the other two drugs. When insomnia is secondary to major depression, antidepressant medication should be administered. Methylphenidate, amphetamines, or other stimulant medications are used for the symptomatic treatment of the sleepiness and sleep attacks of narcolepsy and hypersomnia. For cataplexy and the other two auxiliary symptoms of narcolepsy, imipramine or other tricyclics are the drugs of choice. Protriptyline and medroxyprogesterone have been used in treating mild cases of obstructive sleep apnea, but their efficacy is limited. Similarly, for the treatment of central sleep apnea, medroxyprogesterone and acetazolamide have shown only limited effects. Medication for patients with sleepwalking, night terrors, or nightmares should be prescribed judiciously, and primarily when treatment of an underlying psychiatric condition is desired. The neuropharmacology of sleep should also consider drugs that may cause sleep disorders. Medications with sleep disturbing effects include various antihypertensives, bronchodilators, and the energizing antidepressants. Withdrawal of REM-suppressant drugs, such as the barbiturates, may cause nightmares in association with a REM rebound. Occasionally, a drug or a combination of drugs may produce somnambulistic-like activity in some patients.
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PMID:Clinical neuropharmacology of sleep disorders. 333 64

We have shown that there is a relation between allergy to cow's milk and chronic sleeplessness in infants. In the present report we describe the sleep characteristics of children with allergy-related sleep disruption. We compared the polygraphic characteristics of nine infants studied before and after the exclusion of milk from the diet. The infants had a mean age of 18.3 +/- 13.3 and 25.4 +/- 12.7 weeks at the first and the second recording, respectively. Diagnosis of allergy was based on clinical observation. Sleep normalized after milk was withdrawn, deteriorated after a challenge with milk, and normalized again on a second trial of milk elimination. Before the change in diet, the infants' polygraphic recording showed frequent arousals (8-22), short sleep cycles, and a large amount of NREM1 sleep. Gastroesophageal reflux and sleep apnea were not responsible for the sleep fragmentation. After milk was excluded from the diet for 7 weeks, the infants showed striking changes in sleep quality. There was a significant decrease in number of arousals (-41.7%) and an increase in total sleep time (+22.7%) and in NREM2 and 3 sleep (+387.9%). NREM1 sleep decreased significantly (-42.1%). During the second recordings, these sleep values could not be distinguished from those of 40 age-matched controls studied in the same laboratory environments. We do not know if the observed modifications in sleep could reflect immunologic changes within the central nervous system.
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PMID:Sleep characteristics in milk-intolerant infants. 339 83

This cross-sectional, multivariate study investigated associations between sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and putative risk factors in a heterogeneous group of 720 individuals over the age of 50 years studied during all-night in-lab polysomnography. Results indicated that: aged men were more likely to show impaired respiration during sleep than aged women; excessive daytime somnolence and parasomniac symptoms (snoring, gasping during sleep) were associated with SDB but insomnia was not; obesity accounted for more variance in SDB than age per se, implying that the prevalence of SDB in some elderly persons could be related to the deposition of body fat seen as individuals grow older. All four risk factors (age, sex, obesity, and symptomatic status) were statistically significant and independent predictors of impaired respiration in sleep in the elderly.
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PMID:Risk factors for sleep disordered breathing in heterogeneous geriatric populations. 380 55

Central sleep apnea is a disorder characterized by apneic episodes during sleep with no associated ventilatory effort. More commonly than not these apneas are seen in patients who also have obstructive and mixed events. Although patients with this disorder frequently complain of insomnia and depression, frank hypersomnolence is rarely encountered. As these complaints are common ones seen in numerous clinical situations, and since sleep studies are rarely conducted to investigate their etiology, the true incidence of central sleep apnea has not been determined. The etiology of central apnea remains unknown, although the association between these breathing events and a number of other disease processes has increased our understanding of the disorder. Central apneas during sleep commonly occur after hyperventilation with the associated hypocapnic alkalosis. This occurs at high altitude when hyperventilation is induced by hypoxia and at sea level when spontaneous nocturnal hyperventilation occurs. This suggests that PCO2 is the primary stimulus to ventilation during sleep and that loss of this drive, as occurs with hypocapnia, may produce dysrhythmic breathing. Patients with complete absence of ventilatory chemosensitivity such as occurs with Ondine's curse (central alveolar hypoventilation) or the obesity-hypoventilation syndrome may also have central apneas. For reasons that remain unexplained, central sleep apnea is commonly seen in patients with congestive heart failure, nasal obstruction, and certain neurologic disorders. However, in most patients with central sleep apnea no obvious cause or association can be found. The treatment of this disorder is not entirely satisfactory. If it is severe, mechanical ventilation during sleep can be provided by any one of a number of techniques. However, for the patient who simply complains of insomnia and is found to have a moderate number of central apneas, the treatment choices are limited. Acetazolamide has been shown to decrease central apneas during short-term use, but results have been variable with prolonged administration. Other ventilatory stimulants seem to have little efficacy. Interestingly, oxygen administration has been shown to reduce central apneas considerably in a number of studies, although the explanation for its success is unknown. Central sleep apnea therefore remains a relatively rare disorder whose etiology is not fully understood and whose treatment is not completely satisfactory.
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PMID:Central sleep apnea. 393 82

The relation of sleep complaint to sleep continuity and respiratory disturbance was studied by comparing 2 series of patients with sleep apnea, one group complaining of insomnia and the other of excessive daytime sleepiness. On polysomnographic evaluation, patients with insomnia complaints had fewer and shorter, primarily central, apneas that had little hypoxemic effects. Patients with excessive sleepiness complaints had more and longer, primarily obstructive, apneas that produced significant hypoxemia. Sleep of the excessively sleepy patients was lighter and longer, whereas that of the patients with insomnia was characterized by more wake time before and after sleep onset. The excessively sleepy patients were objectively sleepy on a test of daytime sleepiness, whereas patients with insomnia were alert.
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PMID:Sleep-wake complaints in patients with sleep-related respiratory disturbances. 403 27

An inability to sleep or sleep prematurely ended or interrupted by periods of wakefulness (insomnia) are some of the most frequent complaints heard from patients. Insomnia can be situationally related or persistent in nature. Persistent insomnia may be associated with biological rhythm disturbances, drug dependency, psychophysiologic abnormalities, psychiatric disturbance, sleep apnea syndrome or nocturnal myoclonus. This article describes these pathologies, gives clues toward differential diagnosis, suggests patient subgroups that would benefit from referral for specialized evaluation at a sleep disorder center and describes current treatment options.
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PMID:Sleep disorders: insomnias. 404 25


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