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)

Objective: We investigated glucose metabolism and insulin resistance in non-obese and moderately overweight sleep apnea patients, as well as their response to nasal CPAP treatment.Methods: A group of subjects with glucose intolerance was screened for sleep disordered breathing by clinical interview and ambulatory recordings. Ten subjects were found to have untreated sleep apnea and were asked to participate in further investigation. This included nocturnal polysomnography, oral glucose tolerance test and indirect calorimetry. Subjects then had calibration of nasal CPAP with polysomnography. Two months after start of treatment, all subjects were restudied as at baseline. In parallel, six obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) subjects, diagnosed through the sleep clinic, were matched for gender, age and oxygen desaturation index with the other group, and had a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp at baseline and after 2 months of nasal CPAP.Results: The first ten patients showed no change in total glucose oxidation, glucose oxidation by weight or by fat free mass, or insulin energetic expenditure, despite nocturnal usage of nasal CPAP. Similarly, when comparing baseline to the treatment at 2 months, the six OSAS patients had no change in mean glycemia, insulin, C peptide and hemoglobin (Hgb) A1C measurements. No difference in the amount of glucose infused during the duration of the clamp was noted either.Conclusion: Our data do not support the existence of a significant relationship between glucose and insulin metabolism and obstructive sleep apnea. Obesity, when present, is the important variable.
...
PMID:CPAP treatment does not affect glucose-insulin metabolism in sleep apneic patients. 1131 83

To better understand how humans adapt to hypoxia, the levels of hemoglobin (Hb), serum erythropoietin (Epo), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) were measured in 106 patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome. The results indicated that temporal hypoxic stimulation increases Hb. Furthermore, a minor increase in Epo and a substantial increase in VEGF were found. The induction in patients with severe sleep apnea was greater than that reported in other types of hypoxia. (Blood. 2001;98:1255-1257)
...
PMID:Levels of vascular endothelial growth factor are elevated in patients with obstructive sleep apnea--hypopnea syndrome. 1178 37

Body mass index (BMI; weight per unit surface area) is the scientific yardstick by which overweight is gauged relative to the population norm. The contrary association between obesity and diabetes or hypertension is only too well known. Less appreciated is the heightened sensitivity to respiratory depressants such as sedatives and analgesics in the obese (BMI >/= 30) and the increased incidence of sleep apnea in the morbidly obese (BMI >/= 35)-either or both of which raise the risk of cosmetic surgery when sedation or anesthesia is contemplated. Guided by the BMI, a gender-independent measure of fatness, the surgeon now can inform the patient of her or his relative operative risk and offer an objective rationale for advising overnight hospitalization rather than office-based day surgery. The BMI is readily calculated when height and weight are expressed in metric units, much less so when measured in foot-pound units. In fact, the calculations are sufficiently cumbersome that the BMI remains underused in U.S. office surgery. The author's complimentary "BMI Calculator"-an Excel workbook available on-line to society members-is designed so that office staff need enter only height (in feet and inches) and weight (in pounds) to print the BMI for the patient's permanent record. The BMI places patient weight relative to height in proper perspective for aesthetic surgery, whether with sedation or under general anesthesia. The BMI ought to be as routine a part of the preoperative assessment as blood pressure or hemoglobin content.
...
PMID:Body mass index: risk predictor for cosmetic day surgery. 1149 6

1H NMR solution-state study of elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) myoglobin (Mb) and hemoglobin (Hb) establishes the temperature-dependent chemical shifts of the proximal histidyl N(delta)H signal, which reflects the respective intracellular and vascular PO2 in vivo. Both proteins exist predominantly in one major isoform and do not exhibit any conformational heterogeneity. The Mb and Hb signals are detectable in M. angustirostris tissue in vivo. During eupnea M. angustirostris muscle maintains a well-saturated MbO2. However, during apnea, the deoxymyoglobin proximal histidyl N(delta)H signal becomes visible, reflecting a declining tissue PO2. The study establishes a firm methodological basis for using NMR to investigate the metabolic responses during sleep apnea of the elephant seal and to secure insights into oxygen regulation in diving mammals.
...
PMID:Detection of myoglobin desaturation in Mirounga angustirostris during apnea. 1174 47

The purpose of this review is to describe changes in blood volume and erythropoietic activity occurring under different types of intermittent exposure to hypoxia. These hypoxic episodes can vary from a few seconds or minutes to hours, days, or even weeks. Short hypoxic episodes like sleep apnea only lead to a small increase in hemoglobin concentration, which is mainly due to a hormonal-mediated decrease in plasma volume. In most of these cases the cumulative time spent under hypoxia does not exceed the critical threshold of about 90 min. Endurance athletes and mountaineers who voluntarily expose themselves to hypoxia for some hours or during the night while spending the day at normoxia ("sleep high-train low" concept) do improve their physical performance. Despite raising erythropoietic activity, indicated by elevated plasma concentrations of EPO and the transferrin receptor, the postulated increase in red cell volume has not satisfactorily been proved. Frequent changes between low and high altitudes, which are usual in some South American and Asian countries, provoke similar adaptations in red cell mass as occur in high altitude residents. However, the plasma volume decreases at altitude and increases again when staying at sea level. Even after more than 20 yr of regular moving between low and high altitude, the total blood volume, hemoglobin concentration and hematocrit, as well as the plasma EPO concentration, noticeably oscillate during every hypoxic-normoxic cycle. We assume these changes to be an optimal rapid adaptation of the oxygen transport system to the prevailing hypoxic or normoxic environment. However, possible risks for the organism cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Effects of intermittent exposure to high altitude on blood volume and erythropoietic activity. 1216 61

Hypoxia promotes adherence of leukocytes to endothelial cells by inducing expression of adhesion molecules like intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1). Increased serum levels of circulating ICAM-1 (cICAM-1) have been reported in adults with sleep apnea and associated hypoxemia. This investigation assessed the hypothesis that the overnight change of cICAM-1 levels in children with snoring is correlated with the severity of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing. Evening and morning serum levels of cICAM-1 were measured in children with snoring referred for polysomnography. Twenty-five children with an apnea-hypopnea index greater than or equal to 5 episodes/h (5.5 +/- 1.8 years), 30 subjects with an index less than 5 and greater than 1 (6.3 +/- 2 years), and 19 children with an index less than or equal to 1 (7.1 +/- 3 years) were recruited. Overnight change in cICAM-1 (log-transformed ratio of morning-to-evening levels) was similar in subjects with an apnea-hypopnea index greater than or equal to 5 episodes/h compared to those with an index less than 5 and greater than 1 or to children with an index less than or equal to 1 (-0.001 +/- 0.08 vs -0.03 +/- 0.09 vs -0.06 +/- 0.1; p > 0.05). When multiple regression analysis was applied, apnea-hypopnea index, respiratory arousal index, and oxygen saturation of hemoglobin nadir were not significant predictors of overnight change in cICAM-1 levels. Thus, in children with snoring, overnight change in cICAM-1 levels is not related to severity of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing.
...
PMID:Nocturnal change of circulating intercellular adhesion molecule 1 levels in children with snoring. 1757 13

We evaluated daily variability in the cardiovascular response to arterial chemoreceptors activation during breath holding in shift workers who were obstructive sleep apnea patients. Ten patients and 10 weight and age-matched control subjects were enrolled in the study. The experimental sessions consisted of 10 episodes of breath holding on inspiration interspersed with 1 min free breathing periods, repeated every 6 h: at 0.00, 6.00, 12.00, 18.00 hours. The subjects were examined under two experimental protocols: after day-shift work and after night-shift work (36 h of sleep deprivation). Blood pressure (System Portapres), ECG, and arterial hemoglobin oxygen saturation were monitored continuously. Data analysis were based on Smietanowski procedures written in the 4-th generation script language of MATLAB environment. The two methods introduced by Smietanowski a enabled symbolic description of cardiovascular regulatory mechanisms as cardiac, vascular, or mixed type control (BBC), and allowed quantifying relative contributions of cardiac and vascular components in the blood pressure variability. During the part of the study conducted after day-shift work, repetitive apneas led to a significantly greater increase in blood pressure in the sleep apnea patients, as compared with the controls. BBC analysis demonstrated that in the patients the domination of vascular influences during breath holding periods reached 70+/-2.0% and was significantly greater in comparison with the control group: 56+/-2.8 (P<0.01). However, contribution of cardiac component in the blood pressure response to breath holding was greater in the control group: 32+/-2% as compared with the 18+/-2% in the group of patients (P<0.01). Under the conditions of sleep deprivation (night-work shift), greater blood pressure responses to breath holding were observed in all subjects, but they were larger in the group of sleep apnea patients. The cardiovascular responses to hypoxia during breath holding showed daily variability: greater responses at 12.00 and 18.00 declined at 0.00 and 6.00 h. BBC analysis indicated a greater domination of vascular component in the blood pressure response in patients: 71+/-2.8% vs. 58+/-2% in controls. The contribution of cardiac component predominated in the control group: 27+/-3% vs. 19+/-1% in patients.
...
PMID:Daily changes in cardiac and vascular blood pressure components during breath holding episodes in obstructive sleep apnea patients after day-shift and night-shift work. 1820 83

Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), especially sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome, is often observed in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus; but there are only a few studies on SDB in Japanese diabetic subjects. We investigated the prevalence of SDB in diabetic patients; associations between severity of sleep apnea (SA) and clinical factors, visceral fat, and adiponectin; and associations between type of SA and clinical factors. In the present study, 40 Japanese diabetic patients underwent overnight cardiorespiratory monitoring, and night and morning measurements of serum adiponectin concentrations. Sleep apnea was detected in Japanese diabetic patients at a high prevalence (77.5%). The following variables were associated with SDB: age, body mass index, estimated visceral fat area, and nocturnal reduction in serum adiponectin concentrations. The prevalence of central sleep apnea (CSA, >or=5/h) was 32.3% among diabetic SDB patients. Diabetic SDB patients with CSA had higher hemoglobin, increased intima-media thickness, and higher plasma brain natriuretic peptide levels than those without CSA (<5/h). In conclusion, our study demonstrated a high prevalence of SDB in Japanese diabetic patients, which correlated with visceral fat area and adiponectin. A high frequency of CSA was noted in diabetic SDB patients, together with high hemoglobin, high brain natriuretic peptide, and increased intima-media thickness. The present results of prevalence of SDB may be relevant to the higher incidence of cardiovascular disease in diabetic patients, which need to be clarified in future studies.
...
PMID:Characteristics of sleep-disordered breathing in Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1991 47

We describe a 2-year-old baby affected by Smith-Magenis syndrome (SMS), due to 17p11.2 deletion, who presented repeated episodes of hemoglobin desaturation during REM sleep. The boy, aged 14 months, presented a phenotype characterized by psychomotor delay, right posterior plagiocephaly, telecanthus, strabismus, upslanting palpebral fissures, broad hypoplastic nasal bridge, short philtrum, deep ring shaped skin creases around the limbs, proximal syndactyly, bilateral hypoacusia. Polysomnographic (PSG) recording showed episodes of REM-related hypoventilation (hemoglobin desaturations without apneas or hypopneas). Sleep disorders are present in almost all the cases of SMS, but very few reports describe the sleep-related respiratory patterns. The finding of REM hypoventilation in SMS does not allow an unequivocal interpretation. It could reflect a subclinical restrictive respiratory impairment or, alternatively, an impairment of central respiratory control during REM sleep. In SMS children, respiratory abnormalities during sleep, and in particular during REM sleep, may cause sleep disruption, reduction of time spent in REM sleep, and daytime sleepiness. We therefore suggest that some sleep abnormalities described in SMS could be consequent to Sleep Disordered Breathing, and in particular to REM hypoventilation. Sleep studies in SMS should include the recording of respiratory parameters.
...
PMID:Hypoventilation in REM sleep in a case of 17p11.2 deletion (Smith-Magenis syndrome). 2018 11

Both anemia and sleep disordered breathing are common in patients with dialysis-dependent stage 5 chronic kidney disease. Erythrocytosis resulting from obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is rare in the general population and has never been described in the hemodialysis population. We present a case of asymptomatic isolated erythrocytosis and elevated serum erythropoietin level in an otherwise well and previously erythropoietin-dependent chronic hemodialysis patient with chronic kidney disease secondary to ischemic nephropathy. There was no history or symptoms of cardio-pulmonary or hepatic diseases nor any relevant family history. Screening work-up for malignancies was negative. The clinical history was highly suggestive of OSA and severe OSA (respiratory disturbance index of 59) was confirmed by polysomnographic studies. Successful treatment of the OSA with continuous positive airway pressure resulted in permanent stabilization of the hemoglobin to levels below 13 g/dL without the need for repeated phlebotomies and in dramatic lowering of serum erythropoietin levels. To our knowledge, this is the first case of OSA mediated erythrocytosis in a dialysis patient documented in the literature.
...
PMID:Polycythemia due to obstructive sleep apnea in a patient on hemodialysis. 2064 79


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next >>