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

Six young male patients with grade I (mild) myotonic dystrophy and a complaint of excessive daytime sleepiness were studied during wakefulness and sleep. Pulmonary function tests during wakefulness showed evidence of mild abnormality related to respiratory muscle weakness. During sleep, some patients developed a sleep apnea syndrome with high sleep Apnea Indices. There was no relation between hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses during wakefulness and sleep Apnea Indices. But hypoxemia and hypercapnia worsened considerably during REM sleep. Myotonic dystrophy patients with sleep apnea presented increased pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures during sleep. It was also during sleep that arrhythmias were observed.
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PMID:Respiratory and hemodynamic study during wakefulness and sleep in myotonic dystrophy. 22 21

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

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.
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PMID:Breathing during sleep in patients with myotonic dystrophy and non-myotonic respiratory muscle weakness. 167 61

Postpolio syndrome is a group of related signs and symptoms occurring in people who had paralytic poliomyelitis years earlier. New weakness, fatigue, poor endurance, pain, reduced mobility, increased breathing difficulty, intolerance to cold, and sleep disturbance in various degrees and expressions make up the syndrome. The reported incidence is between 25% and 80%. The origins are multifactorial and can be associated with underexertion, overexertion, inactivity due to intercurrent illness or injury, hypo-oxygenation, sleep apnea, deconditioning, and the failure of sprouted, compensatory large motor units. The exercise question in postpolio syndrome is related to the experience of new weakness or loss of muscle function due to overuse, which is often associated with injudicious repeated challenges to weakened musculature. Carefully prescribed exercise can be used for increasing strength and endurance and improving cardiopulmonary conditioning.
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PMID:Postpolio syndrome and cardiopulmonary conditioning. 186 50

Sleep-disordered breathing may occur in a wide variety of neuromuscular syndromes, and may present with diverse, often isolated, symptoms or findings such as excessive daytime sleepiness, pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, morning headaches, or hypoxia-induced nocturnal seizures. The authors report two sisters with congenital muscular dystrophy in whom central sleep apnoea resulted in the isolated symptom of nocturnal seizures in one, and morning headaches in the other. Review of the literature reveals that sleep-disordered breathing may be common in neuromuscular disorders, and may often be present when clinical weakness is mild, and insufficient to result in diurnal respiratory dysfunction.
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PMID:Central sleep apnoea in congenital muscular dystrophy. 194 Sep 43

Post-polio patients may develop additional neuromuscular and respiratory symptoms decades after the acute attack, the post-polio syndrome. We hypothesize some post-polio symptoms may be due to breathing disorders occurring during sleep. We performed polysomnography on 13 post-polio patients: group 1 (five patients) were those already on ventilatory assistance (rocking beds) and group 2 (eight patients), those without any assistance. Patients requiring new treatment were then evaluated on nasal CPAP or nasal mask ventilation. Group 1 patients, on rocking beds, demonstrated consistently poor sleep quality with decreased total sleep time, sleep efficiency, percentage stage 2, slow wave sleep, rapid eye movement sleep and an increase in the number of arousals and percentage stage 1 sleep. Respiratory abnormalities were also present and in all cases caused significant O2 desaturation. These patients did not respond to CPAP with the rocking bed. Repeat night-time polysomnography on nasal mask ventilation demonstrated an improvement in sleep structure and gas exchange. Three group 2 patients, (group 2a) had sleep within normal limits. The five remaining (group 2b) had poor sleep quality that was similar to but not as disrupted as group 1 patients. All but one patient demonstrated obstructive or mixed apnea and were treated effectively with nasal CPAP. One patient required nasal mask ventilation (due to mixed apnea and marked hypoventilation) to which there was a dramatic response. These patients demonstrated improved sleep quality and an improvement in daytime symptomatology. Sleep studies should be performed on post-polio patients with excessive daytime sleepiness and respiratory complaints. Those with obstructive and mixed apnea can often be treated with nasal CPAP. Those with hypoventilation syndrome and sleep apnea attributable to sleepiness and respiratory complaints. Those with obstructive and mixed apnea can often be treated with nasal CPAP. Those with hypoventilation syndrome and sleep apnea attributable to respiratory muscle weakness can be treated with nasal mask ventilation. Individuals already on respiratory assistance such as rocking beds who have features of respiratory failure can also be treated effectively with long-term nasal mechanical ventilation.
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PMID:Sleep in postpolio syndrome. 236 79

Transient recurrent confusional and stuporous states of nonepileptic origin are clearly less frequent than epileptic ones. They are relatively common in diseases of disturbed vigilance, like narcolepsy, idiopathic hypersomnolence, and sleep apnea. These patients often suffer from attacks of hypovigilance, characterized by altered awareness, automatic behaviour and partial or complete amnesia for the attack. Because of the memory 'black outs' and the frequently associated hypnagogic hallucinations, the patients behave inappropriately and often appear confused. Confusional states also typically arise during basilar artery migraine attacks. This special form of complicated migraine predominantly affects young females and is characterized by symptoms and signs of brain stem dysfunction such as vertigo, ataxia, paresthesia, limb weakness, dysarthria; in 75% of the cases, disorders of consciousness dominate. Transient ischemic attacks are sometimes recurrent and, when involving the cranial basilar territory, may result in confusional states without significant motor dysfunction. Attacks of transient global amnesia are possibly also ischemic in nature and are assumed to arise from transient bilateral limbic failure. Affecting only memory functions, they are strictly spoken not confusional, but must nevertheless be taken into consideration when proper observation during the attack was not possible.
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PMID:[Non-epileptic impaired consciousness in neurologic diseases]. 267 60

Carbaryl, a widely used insecticide, is reputed to have a wide safety margin. It can induce acute cholinesterase poisoning, which is rapidly reversible on discontinuation of exposure. Long-term sequelae from long-term exposure have not previously been described in humans. This report describes the experience of a 75-year-old man who had long-term excessive exposure to carbaryl and in whom a debilitating syndrome, including headaches, memory loss, proximal muscle weakness, muscle fasciculation, muscle cramps, and anorexia with marked weight loss, developed. At the time of diagnosis, serum pseudocholinesterase levels were low, and his major symptoms resolved on termination of exposure. Late clinical features were sleep apnea and progressive development of a peripheral neuropathy. The difficulty in diagnosing the cause of a group of relatively nonspecific symptoms raises the question of whether chronic carbaryl neurotoxicity might be occurring more frequently than previously suspected.
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PMID:Subacute neurotoxicity following long-term exposure to carbaryl. 308 76

A boy referred at the age of 4 years because of obesity and under observation for 16 years, was found to be suffering from a hypothalamic syndrome of unknown origin characterized by progressive obesity, polyphagia, deficiency of growth and thyroid hormone, hyperprolactinemia, hypodipsia, hypernatremia and hyperosmolality without diabetes insipidus. At ages 11 and 16 there were 3 day episodes of spontaneous muscular weakness, hypersomnolence and hypothermia associated with central sleep apnea and severe bradycardia. Subsequently, decreased ventilatory responsiveness to carbon dioxide (CO2) was found as a consequence of blunted neural drive. Therapy with clomipramine HCl (Anafranil Ciba-Geigy) for 6 months led to a normalization of serum sodium levels, pulse rate, ventilatory response to dioxide with no recurrence of the central apnea within 4 following years.
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PMID:Recurrent hypothermia, hypersomnolence, central sleep apnea, hypodipsia, hypernatremia, hypothyroidism, hyperprolactinemia and growth hormone deficiency in a boy--treatment with clomipramine. 346 79

A 55-year-old man is presented who developed severe multifocal myoclonus and tonic clonic seizures in his early thirties, and progressive limb weakness in his mid forties, when a ragged red fibre myopathy was diagnosed. He went on to develop a distal motor neuropathy and respiratory failure. Respiratory function tests indicated respiratory failure secondary to respiratory muscle weakness and a central hypoventilation syndrome. CT scan revealed brain stem atrophy and brain stem evoked responses were abnormal. A sural nerve biopsy showed severe axonal degeneration. Cytochrome difference spectra and polarographic studies on isolated intact muscle mitochondria were normal. This study reports the association of respiratory failure and sleep apnoea with Fukuhara's syndrome and presents biochemical data suggesting that the mitochondrial respiratory chain may be intact in some patients with this syndrome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myoneuropathy with respiratory failure and myoclonic epilepsy. A case report with biochemical studies. 393 3


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