Sleep
-
Beginning with modest clinical observations in 1984, a picture has evolved suggesting that sympathetic nervous system over activity may be responsible in part for the elevated blood pressure seen in obstructive sleep apnea patients. Early studies of urinary and plasma catecholamines indirectly suggested sympathetic over activity carried to daytime, non-apneic conditions. Later intra-neuronal recordings of muscle sympathetic nerve activity directly demonstrated both acute and diumal (non-apneic) sympathetic over activity. ⋯ There is no marker for separating sleep apnea patients with hypertension derived solely from intermittent hypoxia from other secondary causes. Perhaps endothelial cell molecular markers could help to identify patients at risk for cardiovascular change associated with snoring and apnea, as well to guide treatment. Finally, studies demonstrating microvascular changes in blood vessels are extremely difficult to do, but promise to yield important knowledge about cellular mechanisms and results of long-term treatment of sleep apnea on cardiovascular disease.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
A 12-month, open-label, multicenter extension trial of orally administered sodium oxybate for the treatment of narcolepsy.
To evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of nightly sodium oxybate for the treatment of narcolepsy. ⋯ Sodium oxybate is an effective and well-tolerated treatment for narcolepsy.
-
Pulse oximetry (Sp02) is a key parameter monitored during polysomnographic studies, and different acquisition settings can be employed to obtain this data. The purpose of this study was to determine if the use of different settings would significantly influence scoring of respiratory disturbance events (RDE). ⋯ These data confirm the impact of different oximetric recording settings on the profile of RDEs and the importance of reporting such acquisition settings in studies of sleep disordered breathing.
-
Vivago WristCare is a new activity monitoring device, which allows long-term online monitoring of the activity of the user. This study evaluates the ability of the device to discriminate sleep/wake patterns during nighttime and during napping. ⋯ The performance of the WristCare can be assumed to be well comparable to actigraphy in sleep/wake studies. The study suggests that the device may be used in long-term monitoring of sleep/wake patterns with similar performance to actigraphy.