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Obstructive sleep apnea.

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.

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