Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0037315 (sleep apnea)
8,000 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To examine the roles of obstructive apnea (OA) and central apnea (CA) in oxygen desaturation on hypertension and sleep apnea syndrome (SAS), we performed a sleep study on 41 elderly subjects (mean age 69.5 +/- 6.8 years, male:female = 31:10). Nocturnal oxygen desaturation was documented with a pulse oximeter and apneas (OA and CA) were diagnosed on the basis of results of respiratory inductive plethysmography and oronasal flow. Significant desaturation (SDS, greater than 5% drop in SpO2 from baseline value) and desaturation index (DI; epsilon SDS (%) x duration (hour)) were calculated using the continuous nocturnal monitoring system with a pulse oximeter. We defined central type apnea above 50% as the central type group (n = 8, mean age 58.6 +/- 2.9, mean BMI 21.3 +/- 1.0, male:female = 7:1), and obstructive type and mixed type apnea above 50% as the obstructive type group (n = 21, mean age 70.0 +/- 3.2, mean BMI 25.3 +/- 1.0, male:female = 17:4). Other subjects were assigned to the control group (n = 12, mean age 64.3 +/- 2.3, mean BMI 23.8 +/- 1.2, male:female = 7:5). The DI (delta 5%) of the central type was 0.34 +/- 0.17, and that of the obstructive type was 1.78 +/- 0.7 showing a significant increase in the latter compared to the control group (p < 0.02). The DI (< 90%) of the central type was 0.14 +/- 0.07, and that of the obstructive type was 1.72 +/- 0.75, and that of the obstructive type was significantly greater than in the control group (p < 0.05) and central type (p < 0.05). There were 4 cases (33.3%) with hypertension in the control group and 4 cases (50.0%) with hypertension in the central type group, but there were 15 cases (71.4%) with hypertension in the obstructive type group. Hypertensive prevalence in the obstructive group was significantly more than in the control group (p < 0.05). No significant difference in body mass index or age were seen in the obstructive group and control group. There was a significant correlation between mean blood pressure and apnea index (AI). The AI of the hypertensive group was significantly higher than that of the normotensive group (p < 0.001). These results suggest that subjects with significant obstructive apneas may be at greater risk for hypertension than subjects with central apneas and that hypertension in the pathogenesis of SAS may be related to the severity of apneas rather than oxyhemoglobin desaturation.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea syndrome and hypertension using desaturation index]. 1093 27

Parkinson's disease is associated with classical Parkinsonian features that respond to dopaminergic therapy. Neuropsychiatric sequelae include dementia, major depression, dysthymia, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, and sexual disorders. Panic attacks are particularly common. With treatment, visual hallucinations, paranoid delusions, mania, or delirium may evolve. Psychosis is a key factor in nursing home placement, and depression is the most significant predictor of quality of life. Clozapine may be the safest treatment for psychotic features, but more research is needed to establish the efficacy of antidepressant treatments. Dementia with Lewy bodies, the second most common dementia in the elderly, may present in association with systematized delusions, depression, or RBD. Early evidence suggests the utility of rivastigmine, donepezil, low-dose olanzapine, and quetiapine in treating DLB. Parkinson-plus syndromes generally lack a good response to dopaminergic treatment and evidence additional features, including dysautonomia, cerebellar and pontine features, eye signs, and other movement disorders. MSA is associated with dysautonomia and RBD. SND (MSA-P) is associated with frontal cognitive impairments, but dementia, psychosis, and mood disorders have not been strikingly apparent unless additional pathological findings are present. In SDS (MSA-A), impotence is almost ubiquitous; urinary incontinence is frequent; depression is occasional, and sleep apnea should be treated to avoid sudden death during sleep. OPCA neuropsychiatric correlates await further definition. Progressive supranuclear palsy neuropsychiatric features include apathy, subcortical dementia, pathological emotionality, mild depression and anxiety, and lack of appreciable response to donepezil. CBD usually is recognized by early frontal dementia with ideomotor apraxia, often in the right upper extremity, attended later by poorly responsive unilateral Parkinsonism, with additional signs including cortical reflex myoclonus, limb dystonia, alien limb, oculomotor apraxia when asked to look horizontally, depression, personality changes, and, occasionally, Kluver-Bucy syndrome. The neuropsychiatry of FTDP-17 involves apraxia, executive impairment, personality changes, hyperorality, and occasional psychosis. Future research in these Parkinsonian disorders should target the characterization of neuropsychiatric sequelae and their treatment.
...
PMID:The neuropsychiatry of Parkinson's disease and related disorders. 1555 Feb 93

Diagnostic overnight polysomnograms of 33 children with Down syndrome who snored were reviewed. Mean age was 4.9 years, none had had adenotonsillectomy, 91% were non-obese (Down syndrome specific body mass index standard deviation score (BMI SDS) <+2.0) and yet 97% demonstrated obstructive sleep apnoea, with an average apnoea hypopnoea index (AHI) of 12.9 episodes per hour (normal <1) and an average oxygen desaturation of 4%. A higher AHI was associated with lower minimum Spo2, higher Tcco2 and higher number of arousals from sleep per hour (p<0.001). Polysomnography should be a routine investigation for children with Down syndrome who snore regardless of body habitus.
...
PMID:Severity of obstructive apnoea in children with Down syndrome who snore. 1795 92

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS), with a prevalence of 60:1.000.000, results from the loss of paternal chromosome 15, being 56% due to deletion, 24% due to uniparental maternal disomy, and 18% from methylation, an epigenetic phenomenon. The clinical picture begins with extreme muscular hypotonia, which makes it difficult to feed the child in the first year. As the hypotonia improves, usually in the first two years, around the 4th year of life, an insatiable appetite leads these children to an extreme obesity, with alveolar hypoventilation which endangers their lives. So, paradoxically, PWS threatens the lives of the patients, through inanition in a first phase and, afterwards, through excessive weight gain. The use of growth hormone (hrGH) in these children has a primary goal to change the body composition and improve the physical activity and the quality of life. On the other hand, many PWS patients are indeed GH deficient, and an improvement in the height SDS occurs with treatment. We have to be careful, however. When starting a PWS treatment with a patient on hrGH, a careful evaluation of sleep apnoea (polysomnography) as well as a careful examination of the airways is extremely mandatory, since the treatment may compromise the respiratory pattern of some patients.
...
PMID:[Growth hormone usage in Prader-Willi syndrome]. 1879 90