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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has only recently been appreciated, in part because the symptoms and signs of chronic sleep disruption are often overlooked in spite of their debilitating consequences. They typically develop insidiously during a period of years. We now know that the lives of millions of people each year are significantly impaired by the sequelae of OSA. Many of these patients go unrecognized, with tremendous medical and economic consequences for individual patients and for society. Evidence indicates that chronic, heavy
snoring
may be associated with increased long-term cardiovascular and neurophysiologic morbidity. Therefore considerable interest lies in the study of the epidemiology and the natural history of these related disorders. The fundamental problem in OSA is the periodic collapse of the pharyngeal airway during sleep. The pathophysiology of this phenomenon is reviewed in some detail. During apneas caused by obstruction, airflow is impeded by the collapsed pharynx in spite of continued effort to breathe. This causes progressive asphyxia, which increasingly stimulates breathing efforts against the collapsed airway, typically until the person is awakened. Hypopneas predominate in some patients and are caused by partial pharyngeal collapse. The clinical sequelae of OSA relate to the cumulative effects of exposure to periodic asphyxia and to sleep fragmentation caused by apneas and hypopneas. Some patients with frequent, brief apneas and hypopneas and normal underlying cardiopulmonary function may have considerable sleep disruption without much exposure to nocturnal hypoxia. Patients with sleep apnea often have excessive daytime sleepiness. As the disorder progresses, sleepiness becomes increasingly irresistible and dangerous, and patients develop cognitive dysfunction, inability to concentrate, memory and judgment impairment, irritability, and depression. These problems may lead to family and social problems and job loss. Cardiac and vascular morbidity in OSA may include systemic hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, pulmonary hypertension, cor pulmonale, left ventricular dysfunction,
stroke
, and sudden death. The challenge for the clinician is to routinely consider the diagnosis and to incorporate several basic questions in the historical review of systems regarding daytime or inappropriate sleepiness. The diagnosis of OSA is made with polysomnography, and the decision to treat is based on an overall assessment of the severity of sleep-disordered breathing, sleep fragmentation, and associated clinical sequelae. The therapeutic options for the management of OSA are reviewed. Recognition and appropriate treatment of OSA and related disorders will often significantly enhance the patient's quality of life, overall health, productivity, and safety on the highways.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea. 814 53
We wanted to assess habitual
snoring
as a credible risk factor for acute vascular disease, mainly
stroke
and myocardial infarction. The patients selected for the study had been admitted to the hospital through the emergency department, and were evaluated by means of multidimensional interviews and clinical records: 164 had acute cerebrovascular disease, and 136 cardiovascular disease; 330 patients with nonvascular disease were the controls. The evaluation showed 48% of vascular disease patients to be habitual snorers, but only 30% of the controls; the difference was statistically significant. Compared with the controls, in the cerebrovascular patients the risk (odds ratio) associated with habitual
snoring
was significantly increased, and of the same order as the risk associated with age over 65 yrs, male gender, diabetes mellitus, and dyslipidaemia; whilst the risk associated with hypertension was higher. In the cardiovascular patients, the risk associated with habitual
snoring
was again significantly increased and of the same order as the risk associated with male gender, body mass index > 29 (kg.m-2), dyslipidaemia, heavy smoking, excessive alcohol intake and hypertension. A logistic regression analysis, entering the variables in the following order: age, gender, body mass index, diabetes, dyslipidaemia, smoking, alcohol, hypertension, and habitual
snoring
, showed that habitual
snoring
carries a significant risk factor for
stroke
and myocardial infarction, even after adjusting for other factors. Since habitual
snoring
carries a definite risk for acute vascular disease, we conclude that inquiring about it should become routine practice.
...
PMID:Habitual snoring as a risk factor for acute vascular disease. 828 55
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is the most important form of sleep-related breathing disorders due to its high prevalence and its potential for developing cardiovascular diseases. The increased morbidity of these patients is explained by the coincidence with cardiovascular diseases, and the increased mortality of untreated patients is due to cardiovascular complications, which depend on the degree of the breathing disorder. Heavy
snoring
, as a partial obstruction of the upper airways, and OSAS are independent risk factors for the development of cardiovascular diseases and
stroke
. Causal associations exist between acute hemodynamic changes, pressure and volume load, changes in the humoral and the central nervous system, and blood gas alterations during the obstructive apnea and the long-term condition due to OSAS. Obstructive apnea can be divided into an early phase, a late phase, and a phase of the postapneic hyperventilation with respect to hemodynamic changes, blood gas alterations, and the autonomic nervous system. The most striking changes in these parameters are seen at the end of apnea and in the first resumption of breathing, with an increase in systemic and pulmonary blood pressure, decrease in
stroke
volume, and a distinct change in heart rate. Manifestation of systemic hypertension even in the awake state is promoted by changes in the volume system, with activation of neurohumoral changes and by a resetting of baro- and chemoreceptors. Similar mechanisms are discussed in the development of pulmonary hypertension. In this circumstance the role of hypoxemia as a causal factor for pulmonary hypertension or as a consequence due to structural changes of the pulmonary vessels is controversial. OSAS is frequent in patients with coronary heart disease and these patients must be classified as a particular risk group because of apnea-associated silent myocardial ischemia and electric instability of the myocardium. The occurrence of arrhythmia in patients with OSAS is closely related to the apnea and hyperventilation events and depends on the sympathovagal balance. Early diagnosis and suitable therapy of patients at risk not only abolishes the sleep-related breathing disorder but also improves long-term outcome.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea and cardiovascular risk]. 857 38
Sleep apnea, defined as the cessation of breathing for at least 10 seconds during sleep, can have detrimental effects on the critically ill. Three types of sleep apnea exist, the most common being obstructive sleep apnea. Though its prevalence is only 1% to 3% in adults, it is very important to diagnose it and treat it early in the critically ill because it causes respiratory failure and difficult weaning from mechanical ventilation. Its most characteristic manifestations are repetitive apneic episodes during sleep,
snoring
, and diurnal hypersomnolence. Complications of sleep apnea include dysrhythmias, systemic and pulmonary hypertension, hypoxia, hypoventilation, left ventricular dysfunction, and
stroke
. Treatment methods depend on the cause and include medications, surgery, and nasal continuous positive airway pressure. The main nursing role is astute assessment and early detection, proper respiratory management, provision of psychologic support, and patient and family teaching.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea: a challenge in critical care. 877 69
Sleep apnea and
snoring
are widely discussed as risk factors for internal and neurological diseases. The prevalence of
snoring
in an Austrian population survey is about 27.2% (males 36.5%, females 18.9%), and that of apnea (respectively irregularity and/or cessation of breathing) about 8.5% (31% of all snorers). Clinical symptoms like naps, daytime sleepiness, unquiet sleep, hypertonia, headache in the morning and psychological symptoms may be characteristics of sleep apnea. They should lead to further diagnosis and removal of this risk factor for ischemic heart disease and
stroke
.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea as a risk factor]. 883 23
Although sleep apnea (SA) appears to be a cardiovascular risk factor, little is known about its frequency in patients with transient ischemic attack (TIA) and
stroke
. We prospectively studied 59 subjects (26 women and 33 men; mean age, 62 years) with
stroke
(n = 36) or TIA (n = 23) with the use of a standard protocol that included assessment of
snoring
and daytime sleepiness (Epworth Sleepiness Score [ESS]), a validated SA score (Sleep Disorders Questionnaire [SDQ-SA]), and a severity of
stroke
score (Scandinavian
Stroke
Scale [SSS]). SA was considered clinically probable (P-SA) when habitual
snoring
was associated with an ESS of > 10 or when SDQ-SA score was > or = 32 in women and > or = 36 in men. Polysomnography (PSG) was obtained in 36 subjects (group 1) a mean of 12 days after TIA or
stroke
. In 23 subjects (group 2), PSG was not available (n = 11), refused (n = 10), or inadequate (n = 2). Clinical and PSG data were compared with those obtained in 19 age- and gender-matched control subjects. Groups 1 and 2 were similar in mean age (61 versus 64 years), type of event (36% versus 44% TIA), reported habitual
snoring
(58% versus 52%), and P-SA (58% versus 50%). PSG showed SA (Apnea-Hypopnea Index [AHI], > or = 10) in 25 of 36 subjects (69%). The proportion of subjects with SA was similar in the TIA and
stroke
groups (69% versus 70%) and was well above the frequency found in our control group (15%). An AHI of > or = 20 and a minimal oxygen saturation of < 85% were each found in 20 of 36 subjects (55%). Gender and age did not correlate with severity of SA. Subjects with habitual
snoring
, P-SA, or severe
stroke
(SSS of < 30) had a significantly higher AHI (p < 0.05). The sensitivity of P-SA for SA was 64%, and the specificity was 67%. We conclude that SA has a high frequency in patients in the acute phase of TIA and
stroke
and SA cannot be predicted reliably on clinical grounds alone but is more likely in patients with habitual
snoring
, abnormal SDQ-SA, or severe
stroke
.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea in patients with transient ischemic attack and stroke: a prospective study of 59 patients. 890 24
Sleep-related breathing disorders (SRBD) include several disorders gradually developing from simple and loud
snoring
through upper airway resistance syndrome and sleep apnoea up to the Pickwickian syndrome. They are manifestant as a respiratory distress and apnoeic episodes, desaturation of oxygen in the blood and interruption of sleep. These symptoms are demonstrated in a case of a patient with the Pickwickian syndrome. SRBD may result in severe secondary life-threatening cardiovascular complications (nocturnal arrhythmias, sudden cardiac death,
stroke
and pulmonary oedema). They may contribute also to the development of important disorders of public health such as hypertension, obesity, and traffic accidents resulting from hypersomnolence and fatigue. (Tab. 1, Fig. 3, Ref. 46.)
...
PMID:[Sleep-related breathing disorders--an interdisciplinary topic in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education]. 926 12
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common condition characterized by
snoring
, recurrent episodes of cessation of breathing (obstructive apneas), disrupted sleep, and excessive daytime somnolence. Associated serious complications are hypertension, increased risk of heart disease,
stroke
, and increased susceptibility to industrial and motor vehicle accidents. OSA is considerably more common in men than in women. In postmenopausal women, the incidence of OSA increases. These factors suggest that reproductive hormones have a role in the cause of OSA. Treatment with testosterone has been reported to cause OSA in men, and exogenous androgen administration has been reported to cause OSA in one woman. In a review of the English literature, we found no previous reports of OSA that was induced by endogenous testosterone in women. Herein we describe a nonobese 70-year old woman with clinically significant OSA and a benign testosterone-producing ovarian tumor. After successful removal of the tumor, her OSA resolved, and her testosterone level normalized. This unique case supports the theory of male hormonal (testosterone) influence in the OSA syndrome.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea due to endogenous testosterone production in a woman. 951 83
The aim of this article is to present scientific and clinical evidence to support the role of proper head and neck posture in the management of
snoring
and obstructive sleep apnea. Obstruction of the upper-airway during sleep is a serious medical condition often associated with severe daytime somnolence, morning headache, and a host of cardiopulmonary complications, including but not limited to systemic and pulmonary hypertension, nocturnal cardiac dysrhythmias, myocardial infarction, and
stroke
. Though anti-
snoring
pillows are occasionally mentioned in the literature, the role of proper head-neck support during sleep has been largely neglected. In this article the effect of head-neck position on upper-airway obstruction during sleep is discussed from the perspective of both causation and treatment. Based on the evidence presented by the author, it is recommended that the use of cervical-support pillows be considered as an adjunctive treatment modality in patients suffering from
snoring
and obstructive sleep apnea.
...
PMID:Snoring and obstructive sleep apnea: does head posture play a role? 958 90
Many clinicians are familiar with the clinical symptoms and signs of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). In its most blatant form, OSA is complete airway obstruction with repetitive, prolonged pauses in breathing, arterial oxyhemoglobin desaturation; followed by arousal with resumption of breathing. Daytime symptoms of this disorder include excessive daytime somnolence, intellectual dysfunction, and cardiovascular effects such as systemic hypertension, angina, myocardial infarction, and
stroke
. It has been recently recognized that increased pharyngeal resistance with incomplete obstruction can lead to a constellation of symptoms identical to OSA called "upper airway resistance syndrome" (UARS). The typical findings of UARS on sleep study are: (1) repetitive arousals from EEG sleep coinciding with a (2) waxing and waning of the respiratory airflow pattern and (3) increased respiratory effort as measured by esophageal pressure monitoring. There may be few, if any, obvious apneas or hypopneas with desaturation, but
snoring
may be a very prominent finding. Treatment with nasal positive airway pressure (NCPAP) eliminates the symptoms and confirms the diagnosis. Herein we describe two typical cases of UARS.
...
PMID:Upper airway resistance syndrome. 967 67
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