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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Auditory brainstem evoked potentials (ABEPs) were recorded from seven subjects with predominantly central
sleep apnea
. ABEPs were recorded during: (1) waking, (2) non-
REM
sleep between apneic episodes, (3) first half of apneas, and (4) second half of apneas. Latencies of vertex positive peaks III, V, and VI as well as the V-III interpeak latency difference were determined, and the effect of apnea phase on these measures were evaluated. The measures studied did not reveal chronic or acute functional abnormality of auditory brainstem, which may result from or cause apneic episodes during non-
REM
sleep. The normality and stability of ABEPs during apneic sleep indicate effective compensatory mechanisms in auditory brainstem. Brainstem functional changes associated with central apneas may not be reflected in the ABEP measures studied, unless they are part of a more extensive dysfunction.
...
PMID:Auditory brainstem evoked potentials during sleep apnea. 668 89
Near-miss events were observed to occur in indeterminate sleep in a preterm infant reaching term at 6 weeks after birth. Moreover, prolonged
sleep apnea
and periodic respiration were frequently encountered in non-
REM
sleep. In view of the observation that pathologic
sleep apnea
occurs in non-
REM
sleep and the apparently contradictory findings of respiratory depression and more frequent apneas during
REM
sleep, apneic episodes during
REM
sleep were analysed in relation to phasic
REM
events. The frequent occurrence of respiratory pauses in
REM
burst-free periods of
REM
sleep suggests that tonic
REM
mechanisms inhibit respiratory neurons, while phasic
REM
mechanisms are facilitatory and protect an infant from prolonged
sleep apnea
.
...
PMID:REM sleep prevents sudden infant death syndrome. 668 43
The impetus to study sleep changes in a cluster population arose from a recent hypothesis that predicted the finding of
sleep apnea
in this disorder. It holds that cluster attacks may occur in response to oxygen desaturation. Proposed mechanisms involve impairment of carotid body activity secondary to hypothalamic-vasomotor regulatory dysfunction. Five chronic and five episodic cluster patients underwent nocturnal polysomnography, utilizing standard equipment for monitoring sleep status, cardiac activity, nasal and buccal air flow change, chest and abdominal breathing, muscle activity and oxygen saturation. All episodic patients and one of five chronic patients were found to have
sleep apnea
(60%). Mean apneas per hour during NREM sleep were similar to that of
REM
sleep; 26.7 and 28.2, respectively. Six patients with
sleep apnea
experienced 14 cluster headache attacks during the study period. Eight attacks (57%) followed episodes of oxygen desaturation ranging from 65% to 85%. In the
sleep apnea
group, 8 out of 14 attacks (57%) were associated with
REM
; three without, and five following oxygen desaturation. Of the non-apnea group, all of whom had chronic cluster headache, none of 5 attacks were associated with oxygen desaturation, and only 2/5 attacks occurred in relation to
REM
. Thus, our study showed that
sleep apnea
was a common finding in a randomly selected group of episodic cluster patients; and most nocturnal attacks were preceded by oxyhemoglobin desaturation and
REM
-related. These findings were uncommon in the chronic cluster group.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea in cluster headache. 671 22
Depression has been reported to be frequent in
sleep apnea
syndromes. In a sample of 25 consecutive male sleep apneics, 40% met Research Diagnostic Criteria for an affective disorder or for alcohol abuse. A multiple regression analysis indicated that 61% of the variance in depression ratings could be explained by four variables: age,
REM
activity,
REM
latency (square root), and presence or absence of antihypertensive medications (multiple R = 0.78). The use of these variables in a discriminant function analysis correctly predicted the membership of 68% of the sample in either a low or high depression group (kappa = 0.44; p less than .01). These findings are reviewed in relation to other research on age-related sleep changes and vulnerability to depression.
...
PMID:Depressive psychopathology in male sleep apneics. 673 87
A 58-yr-old man with hypothyroidism and
sleep apnea syndrome
was studied to determine the cause of the nocturnal obstructive apnea and oxygen desaturation. Control studies showed free thyroxine (T4) concentration of 0.7 ng/dl (normal, 0.8 to 2.3 ng/dl), and thyroid-stimulating hormone of 32 microIU/ml (normal, less than 12 microIU/ml). Weight, pulmonary function, arterial blood gases, minute ventilation to carbon dioxide production ratio (VE/VCO2), and the ventilatory response to exercise (delta VE/delta VCO2) were normal. Episodes of obstructive apnea (4 per hour during non-REM (NREM) and 10 per hour during
REM
) and oxygen desaturation (9 per hour during NREM and 11 per hour during
REM
) were common during sleep. Oxygen saturation ranged between 72 and 99% and 70 and 97% during NREM and
REM
sleep, respectively. Medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) therapy for 4 wk caused a reduction in awake PaCO2 (38 to 33 mm Hg), and an increase in VE/VCO2 (17%), mouth occlusion pressure (50%), and AVE/VCO2 (23%). During sleep, apneas were completely eliminated and only one episode of oxygen desaturation occurred. L-thyroxine therapy for 2 months after a placebo period caused an awake isocapnic hyperpnea with no change in PaCO2 and VE/VCO2 despite a 23% increase in VE. Mouth occlusion pressure increased 37% but delta VE/delta VCO2 was unchanged. Obstructive apnea and oxygen desaturation during sleep were completely eliminated with L-thyroxine. The patient noted completed relief of symptoms with both MPA and L-thyroxine. We concluded that the
sleep apnea syndrome
was the presenting manifestation of hypothyroidism in this patient and was solely responsible for his symptoms and disability.
...
PMID:Disordered breathing during sleep in hypothyroidism. 679 57
We studied the effects of hyperoxia and hypercapnia on obstructive apneic episodes (OAE) in a 39-year-old male with the
sleep apnea
and hypersomnolence syndrome (SAHS). While inspiring room air, our patient spent approximately 50% of his non-
REM
sleep time in OAE. When the inspired gas was changed to 100% oxygen, the frequency of the OAE decreased slightly, but a statistically significant increase in the duration of each episode was noted. Additionally, a CO2 rebreathe under hyperoxic conditions was carried out during non-
REM
sleep; no OAE were noted during this rebreathe. Therefore, this latter observation suggests that hypercapnia under hyperoxic conditions may reduce the frequency of OAE in patients with the SAHS.
...
PMID:Effects of respiratory gases on the frequency and duration of obstructive apneic episodes in a patient with the sleep apnea-hypersomnolence syndrome. 680 21
The effects of therapy with the tricyclic antidepressant protriptyline were studied in 12 patients with hypersomnolence and moderately severe
sleep apnea
. After treatment there was no significant change in the duration or frequency of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) during non-
REM
sleep, but there was an alteration in the breathing pattern characterized by a decrease in the amount of apnea during SDB events. Apnea, as a percent of disordered breathing time, fell from 60.4 +/- 27.2% to 35.5 +/- 26.7% (p less than 0.01) and was accompanied by a reduction in the peak fall in oxygen saturation from 16.2 +/- 6.2% to 9.2 +/- 4.7% (p less than 0.01). During
REM
sleep there was no change in the pattern, duration, or frequency of SDB, or reduction in the peak fall in oxygen saturation. However, there was a reduction in the amount of Stage
REM
sleep, thereby reducing the more severe SDB events (p less than 0.01) and further improving nocturnal oxygenation. In 10 of 12 patients, there was subjective improvement in daytime hypersomnolence, which was associated with an increase in median sleep onset time from 3.3 +/- 2.2 to 5.1 +/- 2.1 min (p less than 0.01). Although all patients developed mild side effects from the anticholinergic properties of protriptyline manifested by a dry mouth, 4 patients noted additional side effects including urinary hesitancy, mild constipation, and difficulty in maintaining an erection. One patient developed intolerable constipation that necessitated discontinuation of the drug. We conclude that protriptyline reduced daytime hypersomnolence and altered the pattern of SDB, thus improving gas exchange and oxygenation during sleep. Therefore, in selected patients with moderately severe obstructive sleep apnea, therapy with protriptyline is an alternative to surgical treatment with a tracheostomy.
...
PMID:The effects of protriptyline in sleep-disordered breathing. 684 55
One hundred subjects without any complaint of sleep disturbance were evaluated in the sleep laboratory for the presence of
sleep apnea
and sleep apneic activity (SAA). This sample, which had a representative proportion of women and men and a wide age distribution, included only subjects who were physically and mentally healthy and were not using any medication. None of the subjects had the clinical condition of
sleep apnea
, and only 12 percent of the subjects met the more liberal criterion for SAA. The prevalence of SAA was slightly higher in men than in women. SAA was positively and significantly correlated with increasing age. However, relative severity, as judged by the mean number of events and the duration of events, showed no consistent pattern in relation to age. Further, it was demonstrated that those subjects with SAA were significantly heavier than those without the activity. Neither smoking nor caffeine consumption was related to the presence of SAA. When the amount of each sleep stage was controlled for, SAA occurred significantly more often during
REM
sleep. A relatively small number of EEG arousals were related to SAA, with only about one-fifth of the events resulting in brief arousals.
...
PMID:Sleep apneic activity in a normal population. 707 80
Sleep apnea syndromes
and nonapneic arterial oxygen desaturation during sleep are reported more commonly in men than in women. Because men have recently been shown to have a considerably reduced hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) during sleep, we questioned if this finding would apply to women as well. Accordingly, we measured isocapnic hypoxic responsiveness in 6 normal women during wakefulness and all stages of sleep during both follicular and luteal phases of the menstrual cycle. During non-
REM
sleep, women were found to maintain their waking levels of HVR, measured as the slope of the relationship between ventilation and decreasing hemoglobin saturation. Hypoxic ventilatory response fell to 70% of the awake value during
REM
sleep, which was a significant change (p less than 0.05). Although HVR tended to be greater in the luteal than in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, both awake and asleep, this was significant only in Stage 2 sleep (p less than 0.05). When compared with recently reported men studied in this laboratory, these women demonstrated significantly less awake HVR even when corrected for body surface area (p less than 0.05). During sleep men and women had similar hypoxic responses, although this represents a considerable decrement in the awake response in the men and little change in the women. How these findings relate to the observed sexual differences in "sleep disordered breathing" is speculative.
...
PMID:Hypoxic ventilatory response during sleep in normal premenopausal women. 712 40
Twenty-five children, age range 2 to 14 years (mean age = 7), were referred to the Stanford University Sleep Disorders Clinic for various clinical symptoms, including excessive daytime somnolence, heavy nocturnal snoring, and abnormal daytime behavior. All children (10 girls and 15 boys) were polygraphically monitored during sleep. No
sleep apnea syndrome
or oxygen desaturation was revealed. However, each child presented significant respiratory resistive load during sleep associated with electrocardiographic R-R interval and endoesophageal pressure swings. The most laborious breathing occurred during
REM
sleep. Second degree atrioventricular blocks were also noted. Tonsillectomy and/or adenoidectomy was performed in every case and resulted in a complete disappearance or substantial amelioration of the reported symptoms. Objective evaluation by Multiple Sleep Latency Test and Wilkinson Addition Test confirmed the beneficial effect of surgery.
...
PMID:Children and nocturnal snoring: evaluation of the effects of sleep related respiratory resistive load and daytime functioning. 716 Apr 5
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