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      Night-time symptoms: a forgotten dimension of COPD.

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          Abstract

          Sleep quality is often poor in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but these night-time symptoms are frequently unnoticed by physicians and/or not reported by patients themselves. Therefore, the prevalence and clinical impact of sleep disturbances and night-time symptoms in COPD is not well understood and has not been a clinical focus to date. To address this gap, an expert panel meeting was convened in Barcelona, Spain, in March 2011 to discuss the aetiology, evolution, burden, long-term clinical consequences and optimal management of night-time symptoms in COPD. The term "night-time symptoms" in COPD has not been distinctly defined in an objective sense but epidemiological data suggests that the prevalence of nocturnal symptoms and symptomatic sleep disturbance may exceed 75% in patients with COPD. The panel concluded that night-time symptoms in COPD are prevalent and bothersome; that their cause(s) are multiple and include demographic factors, such as age and obesity, pharmacotherapy, disease-specific symptoms and the presence of comorbid sleep disorders, and other medical conditions; and that potential long-term consequences can include lung function changes, increased exacerbation frequency, emergence or worsening of cardiovascular disease, cognitive effects, depression, impaired quality of life and increased mortality. To date, few interventional studies have investigated them, but emerging data suggest that bronchodilator therapy can improve them if deployed appropriately. In summary, night-time symptoms in COPD warrant further clinical investigation with validated tools.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Eur Respir Rev
          European respiratory review : an official journal of the European Respiratory Society
          European Respiratory Society (ERS)
          1600-0617
          0905-9180
          Sep 01 2011
          : 20
          : 121
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Thorax Institute, Hospital Clinic, IDIBAPS, Villaroel 1170, Barcelona, Spain. alvar.agusti@clinic.ub.es
          Article
          20/121/183
          10.1183/09059180.00004311
          9584119
          21881146
          18533199-feda-4176-b695-560160680e53
          History

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