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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
is characterized by transient hypoxemias which are thought to affect mental functioning. Accordingly, speculation and research have focussed on relationships between
sleep apnea
and dementia. We studied 235 nursing home (ie institutionalized) patients (152 women with a median age of 83.5; 83 men with a median age of 79.7) with portable sleep recording equipment. The Mattis Dementia Rating Scale and the
Geriatric
Depression Scale were given to each. Seventy percent of the patients had five or more respiratory disturbances per hour of sleep and 96 percent showed some dementia.
Sleep apnea
was significantly correlated with all subscales on the dementia rating scale. There were trivial differences in dementia ratings between those with mild-moderate apnea and those with no apnea. There were significant differences, however, between the latter two groups and those with severe apnea. In particular, items reflecting attention, initiation and perseveration, conceptualization, and memory tasks on the DRS distinguished between those with and without severe
sleep apnea
. Among those patients with no depression, all patients with severe
sleep apnea
were also severely demented. Our data suggest that there is a strong relationship between dementia and
sleep apnea
when the
sleep apnea
and dementia are severe. Although causality cannot be inferred from associations, our hypothesis for study is that
sleep apnea
causes deficits in brain function, possibly due to global effects rather than any particular cortical or subcortical structure.
...
PMID:Dementia in institutionalized elderly: relation to sleep apnea. 200 39
Snoring was described in literature even before medicine. Common definitions do not consider acoustic measurements of snoring. In this paper we discuss the main pathophysiological aspects of snoring and the snoring-sleep relationship as the generating mechanisms. Snoring can be analysed and measured by the following methods: 1) Leq-Equivalent Continuous Sound Level, which only quantifies noisiness, annoyance, and damage to the partner's and snorer's hearing; 2) Power
Spectrum
, with frequency values, formantic structure data and typical shape, which can help to distinguish simple snoring from heavy snoring with obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome (OSAS); 3) Linear Prediction Code (LPC) method, which can define the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the upper airways and which locates sites of obstruction. Simulated snoring analysis with LPC and with simultaneous fluoroscopy permits the definition of CSA and the identification of three snoring patterns: nasal, oral and oronasal. Snoring is an important sign of sleep-related breathing disorders (SRBD), of the upper airway resistance syndrome (UARS), and of the OSAS. Snoring is a symptom of nasal obstruction and is associated with cardiovascular diseases and nocturnal asthma as a trigger or causative factor; however, its acoustic features in these disorders are not well-defined. Home monitoring of snoring is very useful for epidemiology and is mandatory, together with heart rate and arterial oxygen saturation (Sa,O2), to screen SRBD.
...
PMID:Snoring: analysis, measurement, clinical implications and applications. 883 48
Arterial blood pressure is influenced by sleep-related breathing disorders. As cardiovascular consequences can be diagnosed by an accurate recording and analysis of blood pressure, new recording methodologies and an approach to analysis are presented here. Invasive continuous blood pressure recording is the common reference for all methodologies. As blood pressure varies rapidly in parallel with sleep-related breathing disorders it is indispensible to record blood pressure continuously. To introduce non-invasive methodology the Finapres system was used during sleep studies; a validation study showed severe limitations. This study was followed by the validation of an improved system called Portapres, which is portable, has two finger cuffs and a hydrostatic height compensation. Analysis of continuous blood pressure in patients with
sleep apnoea
is carried out to detect mechanisms which influence the cardiovascular risk.
Spectrum
analysis of systolic blood pressure showed two different major oscillations present in patients with obstructive
sleep apnoea
. One oscillation (<0.06 Hz) occurs in parallel with each apnoeic episode and the other oscillation (0.2-0.4 Hz) occurs in parallel with the obstructive efforts during each apnoea and in parallel with respiration during periods of snoring. These two oscillations were so specific that the use of non-invasive continuous blood pressure recording allowed an estimation of the extent of underlying breathing disorders, and assessment of cardiovascular risk in a patient with obstructive apnoea in terms of hypertension and on the basis of ambulatory monitoring.
...
PMID:Blood pressure analysis. 1060 67
A placebo-controlled, partial cross-over, double-blind, randomized study was performed with 46 adults with
sleep apnea
-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) to determine the effect of therapeutic and subtherapeutic (0-1 cm H(2)O) nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment on polysomnographic and neuropsychological testing. The following neuropsychological tests were administered:
Geriatric
Depression Scale, Trail Making A and B, Digit Span Test Forward and Backward, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, SteerClear, Digit Symbol, Controlled Oral Word Association, and Complex Figure Recall. Compared with results without CPAP, subtherapeutic CPAP did not affect any measured polysomnographic parameter. Comparison of neuropsychological test results obtained between the initial periods of effective treatment (Group 1, 16.1 d; Group 2, 19.6 d; p = NS) in all subjects showed significant improvements in Digit Symbol, Digit Span Backward, and Complex Figure tests. However, there were no group differences in changes in test results during the period when one group was on effective CPAP and the other on ineffective CPAP (Group 1, 16.1 d; Group 2, 13.9 d; p = NS). The results indicate the feasibility and importance of using ineffective CPAP as a placebo treatment and the importance of including a placebo control in studies evaluating the effect of treatment on neuropsychological function in SAHS.
...
PMID:Effect of nasal continuous positive airway pressure on neuropsychological function in sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome. A randomized, placebo-controlled trial. 1179 Jun 69
Geriatric
patients often complain about sleep disorders, but many of the typical sleep disturbances in the elderly are thought to be normal consequences of old age and go underdiagnosed and undertreated. Sleep disorders are estimated to affect nearly 50% of older persons. Most frequently the elderly suffer from
Sleep Disordered Breathing
(SDB), Periodic Limb Movements in Sleep (PLMS), Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS), morning headaches, circadian rhythm disorders, excessive daytime sleepiness, Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSAS), and insomnia. This review describes all these common sleep problems in the older population and their possible treatment.
...
PMID:Sleep disorders in the elderly. 1570 Jun 32
This paper first describes the AM-FM demodulation of an arterial pressure signal. Although it is known to be efficient on signals modulated by breathing, we demonstrate that in case of lack of respiratory modulation (real or simulated central
sleep apnea
), the AM-FM algorithm doesn't perform well in heart rate extraction. We introduce then a new algorithm based on Singular
Spectrum
Analysis eigenvalues which performs better cardiac frequency estimation in this context. Respiratory estimation is possible but is beyond the scope of this paper. The error for cardiac frequency estimation is around 0.2 BPM (Beats Per Minute) versus 5.5 BPM for the AM-FM demodulation. Further experimentations will be performed (with this time both cardiac and respiratory assessments) and will deal with real
sleep apnea
cases.
...
PMID:Pulse rate analysis in case of central sleep apnea: a new algorithm for cardiac rate estimation. 1996 48
This feature article for the thematic series on congestive heart failure (CHF) readmissions aims to outline important gaps in guidelines for patients with multiple comorbidities and the elderly. Congestive heart failure diagnosis manifests as a 3-phase journey between the hospital and community, during acute, chronic stable, and end-of-life (palliative) phases. This journey requires in variable intensities a combination of multidisciplinary care within tertiary hospital or ambulatory care from hospital outpatients or primary health services, within the general community. Management goals are uniform, ie, to achieve the lowest New York Heart Association class possible, with improvement in ejection fraction, by delivering gold standard therapies within a CHF program. Comorbidities are an important common denominator that influences outcomes. Comorbidities include diabetes mellitus, chronic obstructive airways disease, chronic renal impairment, hypertension, obesity,
sleep apnea
, and advancing age.
Geriatric
care includes the latter as well as syndromes such as frailty, falls, incontinence, and confusion. Many systems still fail to comprehensively achieve all aspects of such programs. This review explores these factors.
...
PMID:Moving From Heart Failure Guidelines to Clinical Practice: Gaps Contributing to Readmissions in Patients With Multiple Comorbidities and Older Age. 3061 87