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      Mortality and Apnea Index in Obstructive Sleep Apnea

      , , , ,
      Chest
      American College of Chest Physicians

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          Undiagnosed sleep apnea in patients with essential hypertension.

          The prevalence of sleep apnea was studied in 46 middle- and older-aged men with "essential hypertension." Thirty-four age- and weight-similar normotensive men were also studied. Fourteen hypertensive men and three controls had sleep apnea syndrome, as defined as greater than ten apneas per hour of sleep. Hypertensive men with apnea tended to be more overweight and slightly older than the hypertensive men without apnea, but differences were not statistically significant. Individual men with apnea could not be distinguished by their answers on a questionnaire that elicited symptoms related to apnea. Seven hypertensive men with apnea were treated with protriptyline and one with uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, and apnea index (apneas per hour) decreased by 77% from pretreatment levels while mean blood pressure decreased from 149/95 mm Hg to 139/90 mm Hg. Undiagnosed sleep apnea syndrome may be associated with systemic hypertension in many middle- and older-aged men. In some, sleep apnea syndrome could be the cause of hypertension, and in others it may contribute to hypertension of another cause.
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            Some Epidemiological Data on Snoring and Cardiocirculatory Disturbances

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              Snoring and cerebral infarction.

              The association of snoring with cerebral infarction was tested in a case-control study of 50 male patients with cerebral infarction and 100 male patients with other disorders. Cerebral infarction was significantly associated with habitual (almost always or always) snoring; the risk ratio of cerebral infarction between those who did and did not snore habitually was 10.3 (95% confidence limits 3.5-30.1). The corresponding risk ratio was 2.8 (95% CL 1.3-5.8) for snoring often, almost always, or always compared with snoring occasionally or never, but the association was still significant. The association was also found when age and body mass index were taken into account.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chest
                Chest
                American College of Chest Physicians
                00123692
                July 1988
                July 1988
                : 94
                : 1
                : 9-14
                Article
                10.1378/chest.94.1.9
                1b9076d9-fe18-4e47-b875-7a47ec7293bb
                © 1988

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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