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Query: UMLS:C0917801 (
insomnia
)
10,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
OSAS, a common cause of disrupted sleep and EDS, result from repetitive closure of the upper airway during sleep. It probably represents the most severe syndrome related to obstruction of the upper airway; less severe forms include UARS, a syndrome characterized by the need for increased effort to breath but no prominent apneas or hypopneas, and primary
snoring
. Initial clues to the presence of OSAS and related disorders are derived from the history and include loud
snoring
, EDS or
insomnia
, and witnessed apneas. Some patients, especially women, may complain mostly of tiredness or fatigue, and children may present with behavioral abnormalities. Obesity, a large neck circumference, and a crowded oropharynx are common on physical examination. Nonobese patients, in particular, often have retrognathia, a high-arched narrow palate, macroglossia, enlarged tonsils, temporomandibular joint abnormalities, or chronic nasal obstruction. The clinical suspicion of obstructed nocturnal breathing is confirmed by overnight polysomnography, and an MSLT may be used to assess sleepiness. Esophageal manometry during polysomnography facilitates diagnosis of UARS. Treatment most commonly consists of nasal CPAP or BPAP, although problems with compliance make surgical treatment preferable in some cases. Although UPPP eliminates sleep apnea only in a minority of patients, combining UPPP with maxillofacial procedures appears to improve outcomes. Other treatments such as the use of dental appliances or medications, weight loss, and positional therapy may be useful as adjunctive therapy for moderate to severe OSAS or as primary treatments for UARS or mild OSAS.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea and related disorders. 887 78
Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) is a form of sleep-disordered breathing seen in approximately 40% of congestive heart failure patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction of < 40%. It is characterized by a crescendo-decrescendo alteration in tidal volume separated by periods of apnea or hypopnea. Sleep is generally disrupted, often with frequent nocturnal arousals. Clinical features include excessive daytime sleepiness, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea,
insomnia
, and
snoring
. Proposed mechanisms include the following: (1) an increased CNS sensitivity to changes in arterial PCO2 and PO2 (increased central controller gain); (2) a decrease in total body stores of CO2 and O2 with resulting instability in arterial blood gas tensions in response to changes in ventilation (underdamping); and (3) an increased circulatory time. In addition, hyperventilation induced hypocapnia seems to be an important determinant for the development of CSR. Mortality appears to be increased in patients with CSR compared to control subjects with a similar degree of left ventricular dysfunction. Therapeutic options include medically maximizing cardiac function, nocturnal oxygen therapy, and nasal continuous positive airway pressure. The role that other therapeutic modalities, such as inhaled CO2 and acetazolamide, might have in the treatment of CSR associated with congestive heart failure has yet to be determined.
...
PMID:Cheyne-Stokes respiration during sleep in congestive heart failure. 904 98
To assess the association between the economic recession of the 1990s in Finland and sleep behaviour, a longitudinal study was conducted in an adult Finnish population cohort. Baseline data were obtained by means of reports on sleep behaviour, health-related behaviour, health status, and objective laboratory tests in 1983-1987. The second screening conducted in 1992-1995, i.e. during economic recession, repeated data collection by postal questionnaires. The prevalences of various sleep symptoms including
insomnia
, daytime tiredness, fatigue, parasomnias and the use of hypnotics remained similar in the same age cohorts during economic recession. Alcohol consumption and
snoring
increased among the middle-aged (30-49 years), though
snoring
shows the greatest individual stability among various sleep symptoms. Despite some baseline differences in the sleep/health behaviour frequencies, the changes were independent of gender and socioeconomic class. The prevalences over eight years of
insomnia
and
snoring
show fair chronicity, whereas daytime tiredness and fatigue seem to be less chronic. Middle-aged participants who were stably employed at the initial screening but became unemployed during economic recession were studied separately. Prospectively unemployed persons suffered more from
insomnia
and used more hypnotics than the continuously employed. We conclude that the sleep quality of the general Finnish population has not drastically deteriorated during severe economic recession except among unemployed blue-collar workers.
...
PMID:Quality of sleep during economic recession in Finland: a longitudinal cohort study. 922 96
Between 1992, the year in which the Sleep Out-Patient Clinic at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Vienna, Allgemeines Krankenhaus (General Hospital) Vienna, was established, and 1996, 817 patients (58% females, average age 52 years; 42% males, average age 48 years) were treated for sleep disorder. According to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10) of the World Health Organization (WHO), 70% of the patients presented with a non-organic sleep disorder and 30% with an organic sleep disorder as main diagnosis. Non-organic
insomnia
was by far the most frequently diagnosed sleep disorder (48%), while within the organic sleep disorders sleep apnea was dominant (12%). In regard to the additional non-organic (mental disorder) diagnoses rounding off the clinical picture, neurotic, stress related, and somatoform disorders were the most common (41%), followed by affective disorders (31%) and mental and behavioural disorders due to intake of psychoactive substances, e.g. alcohol, drugs (15%). Additional organic diagnoses related to sleep disorders involved primarily endocrine disorders such as adipositas (23%), followed by cardiovascular disorders (19%), and primary
snoring
(17%). The sleep out-patient clinic has at its disposal a supportive diagnostic armamentarium such as all-night sleep polysomnography, 24-hour polysomnography, the Multiple Sleep Latency Test, EEG and EEG-mapping in the affiliated sleep laboratory, the evaluation of event-related potentials (P300) and actometry in the psychophysiological laboratory, as well as psychological and psychophysiological tests in the clinical psychodiagnostic laboratory, in order to determine the right treatment or preventive measures for the individual patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects of sleep disorders--experiences with 817 patients of an ambulatory sleep clinic; comment]. 928 Dec 26
Patients with neuromuscular disease may suffer from nocturnal respiratory failure despite normal daytime respiratory function. The physiological reduction in muscle tone during sleep may be life-threatening in a patient with impaired muscle strength. Nocturnal respiratory failure may occur in patients with the postpolio syndrome, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy, and muscular dystrophy. Diagnosis of obstructive, central and mixed apneas, hypopneas, and hypoventilation is best made using polysomnography. Therapeutic options include noninvasive ventilation such as continuous positive airway pressure, bilevel positive airway pressure, intermittent positive pressure ventilation and, rarely, tracheostomy, oxygen, or protriptyline. Evaluation by a sleep specialist should be initiated in any neuromuscular patient with nocturnal symptoms such as air hunger, intermittent
snoring
or breathing, orthopnea, cyanosis, restlessness, and
insomnia
. Daytime symptoms may include morning drowsiness, headaches and excessive daytime sleepiness. Polycythemia, hypertension, and signs of heart failure may also be seen. Effective treatment is available, and may improve the quality of life, and possibly increase survival.
...
PMID:Nocturnal respiratory failure as an indication of noninvasive ventilation in the patient with neuromuscular disease. 967 Mar 10
Excessive daytime sleepiness in the general community is a newly recognized problem about which there is little standardized information. Our aim was to measure the levels of daytime sleepiness and the prevalence of excessive daytime sleepiness in a sample of Australian workers and to relate that to their self-reported sleep habits at night and to their age, sex, and obesity. Sixty-five percent of all 507 employees working during the day for a branch of an Australian corporation answered a sleep questionnaire and the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS) anonymously. Normal sleepers, without any evidence of a sleep disorder, had ESS scores between 0 and 10, with a mean of 4.6 +/- 2.8 (standard deviation). They were clearly separated from the "sleepy" patients suffering from narcolepsy or idiopathic hypersomnia whose ESS scores were in the range 12-24, as described previously. ESS scores > 10 were taken to represent excessive daytime sleepiness, the prevalence of which was 10.9%. This was not related significantly to age (22-59 years), sex, obesity, or the use of hypnotic drugs but was related significantly but weakly to sleep-disordered breathing (frequency of
snoring
and apneas), the presence of
insomnia
, and reduced time spent in bed (insufficient sleep).
...
PMID:Daytime sleepiness and sleep habits of Australian workers. 941 43
Sleep disorders are acknowledged to be common but remain underrecognized by the medical community, often attributed to the failure to question patients about their sleep quality. We examined the prevalence of sleep complaints (
insomnia
or excessive daytime sleepiness) in a group of general medical patients by administering a questionnaire to hospitalized patients in a Veterans Affairs tertiary care medical center. A total of 222 consecutive adults (215 men, 60 +/- 14 years; body mass index, 24.8 +/- 5.6) completed the questionnaire. Of these, 105 patients (47%) had either
insomnia
, excessive daytime somnolence, or both; 63 (28%) had excessive daytime somnolence, which was severe in 27 (12%). Of 75 patients (34%) who had
insomnia
, a third were taking hypnotic medication. Forty patients (18%) had
snoring
, which was associated with excessive daytime somnolence in 36, whereas 46 patients (21%) had either restless legs or a combination of leg jerks and leg kicking or twitching during sleep, associated with a sleep complaint (
insomnia
in 32). The medical records were subsequently reviewed to assess the admitting physicians' recognition of these symptoms. No record included mention of any patient symptom related to sleep. We conclude that symptoms related to sleep, some of which may be clinically important, are common, and that none of these complaints appear to be recognized by the physicians of record.
...
PMID:Failure of physician documentation of sleep complaints in hospitalized patients. 977 Nov 52
Sleep-related complaints have become a highlight for physicians as well as public health administrators. Studies of sleep patterns and sleep-related complaints of shift workers have been useful in minimizing reduction in the quality of life due to the warping of the sleep-wake cycle. The objective of the present study was to assess patterns of sleep, sleep-related complaints as well as physical activity and scoring rates for depression and anxiety in interstate bus drivers. Data were obtained with a sleep questionnaire, with the Beck inventory for depression, and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). A total of 400 interstate bus drivers from the northern, southern, central-western and south-eastern regions of Brazil were interviewed. Sixty percent of the subjects interviewed presented at least one sleep-related complaint, 16% admitted to have dozed at the wheel while on duty, and 41% stated that they exercised on a regular basis. Other sleep disturbance complaints reported were: sleep latency 29'17"; physical fatigue, 59.8%; mental fatigue, 45.4%; sleepiness, 25.8%; irritability, 20.6%;
insomnia
, 37.5%, respiratory disturbances, 19. 25% and
snoring
, 20.75%. Scores for anxiety and depression were not in the pathological range. The present data reinforce the view that bus drivers are generally discontent with shift work and its effects on sleep. Consequently, it is very important to establish an appropriate work schedule for drivers, besides implementing photo-therapy and physical activities in order to minimize sleepiness when driving.
...
PMID:Sleep patterns and sleep-related complaints of Brazilian interstate bus drivers. 1062 77
The objective was to compare the prevalence of sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) in elderly individuals with a history of stroke to the one in individuals, matched by age and sex with a history of
insomnia
. To determine if previous subjective sleep complaints in the elderly are associated with stroke. A cross-sectional study with subsequent 3-year follow-up was designed in an acute geriatric inpatient unit. 19 subjects with documented stroke and 21 subjects with
insomnia
were included. All participants were assessed with a sleep questionnaire, an overnight polysomnographic examination including a recording of respiratory movements, and pulse oximetry. SAS was diagnosed in 68.4 p. 100 in the stroke group compared with 28.6 p. 100 in the
insomnia
group (p = 0.01). The median apnea/hypopnea index was significantly higher in the stroke group: 25 events per hour versus 2 in the
insomnia
group (p = 0.01). The median lowest oxygen saturation was not significantly different in the two groups (p = 0.3).
Snoring
and previous daytime sleepiness were both correlated with stroke (p = 0.05, p = 0.003). Among sleep complaints and cardiovascular risk factors, only a history of diabetes and previous daytime sleepiness were found to be significantly associated with stroke (p = 0.01, p = 0.002). Mortality was higher in SAS subjects (58.8 p. 100) than in non SAS subjects (33 p. 100). The difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.14), but a tendency could be noticed. SAS is a common finding in elderly individuals after a stroke. Physicians must be aware of the risks of prescribing sedatives and anxiolytics to these patients.
...
PMID:[Sleep apnea syndrome and stroke in the elderly population]. 1063 25
Sleep problems (i.e.,
insomnia
) affect midlife women as they approach and pass through menopause at rates higher than at most other stages of life. The purpose of this article is to critically review what is known about
insomnia
(perceived poor sleep) and physiologically assessed sleep, as well as sleep-related disordered breathing (SDB), in women according to menopausal status and the role of hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) hormones. Self-report evidence that sleep difficulties are related to the hormonal changes of menopause is mixed. Data from studies in which sleep was physiologically measured reveal that sleep problems appear corequisite with hot flashes and sweats. Results are difficult to compare across studies because of varying methodologies in how sleep quality and patterns were assessed and how age cohorts and menopausal status were defined. The risk of SDB increases with age, although women are less susceptible at any age than men. As with men,
snoring
, obesity, and high blood pressure are clear risk factors. Some women may be underdiagnosed for SDB, as they have somewhat different symptom manifestations than men. Usually, frank apnea is not as evident. Primary care clinicians should be mindful of the potential for SDB in women who are obese, have high blood pressure, are cognizant of
snoring
, and report morning headaches and excessive daytime sleepiness. Improved care will result from consistently incorporating sleep
insomnia
assessments into practice as a basis for referring to sleep centers as necessary or prescribing sleep-enhancing behavioral and pharmacological treatments.
...
PMID:Sleep disturbance in menopause. 1074 14
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