Cases reported "Sleep Disorders"

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1/33. Sleep disordered breathing during REM sleep in Freeman-Sheldon syndrome.

    OBJECTIVES: To examine the sleep-disordered breathing in patients with Freeman-Sheldon syndrome (FSS). MATERIAL AND methods: One night polysomnography was performed for 2 teenage FSS patients. RESULTS: They showed frequent obstructive sleep apnea exclusively during rapid-eye-movement sleep. CONCLUSION: FSS is a risk factor for the occurrence of sleep disordered breathing.
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keywords = breathing
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2/33. Hypnic headache: another indomethacin-responsive headache syndrome?

    Hypnic headache syndrome is a benign, recurrent, late-onset headache disorder that occurs exclusively during sleep. lithium has been reported to be an effective treatment, but the side effects of this medication are sometimes prohibitive, particularly in the elderly. Other drugs have been reported to be effective in this disorder, including caffeine, flunarizine, and verapamil. Recently, indomethacin has been reported to effectively suppress hypnic headaches. We report the response of seven patients with hypnic headache who were treated with indomethacin. Hypnic headache syndrome appears to represent yet another headache disorder in which there is sometimes an impressive response to indomethacin.
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ranking = 0.21970091110592
keywords = headache
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3/33. Hypersomnia with periodic breathing (an acromegalic Pickwickian).

    The syndromes of Pickwickian, Ondine's curse, and primary alveolar hypoventilation are respiratory disorders manifesting increased sleepiness and irregular respiratory rhythms. These disorders are currently grouped as hypersomnia with periodic breathing (HPB). Polygraphic techniques have lead to a reasonable hypothesis as to the pathophysiology of the multiple variants of HPB. Discernible causes of HPB have been attributed to both central and peripheral factors. Peripheral factors encompass those conditions relating to upper airway obstruction. An acromegalic person suffering the HPB syndrome secondary to laryngeal stenosis is described.
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ranking = 0.8334521822
keywords = breathing, upper
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4/33. Pickwickian syndrome, 20 years later.

    The Pickwickian syndrome stimulated new pathophysiological concepts in regard to control of ventilation. With the advent of sleep laboratories, the peculiar sleep apnea occurring in some of these patients has been explained on the basis of intermittent upper airway obstruction. Two patients with different manifestations of the Pickwickian syndrome are presented. The suggestion is made that these two subsyndromes should have unique designations. The Auchincloss syndrome is manifested by right heart failure and respiratory acidosis in obese patients who are alert and have no major abnormality of breathing pattern. The fundamental cause of this abnormality is the increased work of breathing caused by the obesity. The cost of breathing is so high that the ventilatory regulation is compromised and respiratory acidosis results. The Gastaut syndrome is characterized principally by hypersomnia and sleep apnea. The fundamental defect is upper airway obstruction during sleep, resulting in increased work of breathing, which together with the increased work caused by obesity leads to respiratory acidosis and right ventricular failure. Hypersomnia, rather than heart failure or respiratory acidosis, is the major manifestation of this syndrome, and is the result of sleep loss.
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ranking = 0.66690436440001
keywords = breathing, upper
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5/33. Cervicogenic headache: the importance of sticking to the criteria.

    Cervicogenic headache (CEH) is a headache, but its origin is in the neck. Recently, two cases of intracranial tumour, which unfortunately were originally diagnosed as CEH, were published. The authors felt that this sequence of events demonstrates the insufficiency of the current CEH criteria. We--on the other hand--feel strongly that, on the contrary, this small challenge may have demonstrated the robustness of the CEH criteria. The criteria of CEH were actually not fulfilled at any time. We marshal our arguments in support of this view and concentrate on one of their cases (no. 1).
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ranking = 0.094157533331108
keywords = headache
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6/33. Report of eight new cases of hypnic headache and mini-review of the literature.

    Hypnic headache is a rare condition first described by Raskin in 1988. This headache is not included in the first edition of the International Headache Society classification (IHC 1st Edition). We describe eight new Italian hypnic headache cases and consider our findings in the light of literature data. Our cases do not completely fulfil the diagnostic criteria for the syndrome proposed in 1997 by Goadsby and Lipton: four of our patients reported an attack duration longer than 60 minutes (ranging from 3 to 10 hours) and five reported unilateral pain. These data are in line with an analysis of all 61 cases published in the literature to date, which reveals a pain duration of over 60 minutes in 45.9% of the cases and unilateral attacks in 36%. Hypnic headache will be included in the fourth chapter (Other Primary Headaches) of the revised edition of the above-mentioned classification (IHC 2nd Edition).
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ranking = 0.12554337777481
keywords = headache
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7/33. Sleep-related headache syndromes.

    The relationship between sleep and sleep disorders and headache remains unclear. Clinical experience and numerous studies document some sort of relationship, but the exact nature remains understudied and complex. Changes in sleep duration and sleep quality appear to be capable of affecting headaches of different types. Obstructive sleep apnea can cause or exacerbate headaches in a susceptible person. Obstructive sleep apnea also may cause a specific headache when awakening, which is different from migraine or tension headache and disappears after treatment of the sleep and breathing disturbance. Hypnic headache is another type of sleep-exclusive headache that has been proposed. Hypnic headaches are brief, moderately severe, and affect the elderly primarily.
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ranking = 0.35498173332888
keywords = breathing, headache
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8/33. Treatment of bipolar, seizure, and sleep disorders and migraine headaches utilizing a chiropractic technique.

    OBJECTIVE: To discuss the use of an upper cervical technique in the case of a 23-year-old male patient with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder, sleep disorder, seizure disorder, neck and back pain, and migraine headaches. CLINICAL FEATURES: The patient participated in a high school track meet at age 17, landing on his head from a height of 10 ft while attempting a pole vault. Prior to the accident, no health problems were reported. Following the accident, the patient developed numerous neurological disorders. Symptoms persisted over the next 6 years, during which time the patient sought treatment from many physicians and other health care practitioners. INTERVENTION AND OUTCOME: At initial examination, evidence of a subluxation stemming from the upper cervical spine was found through thermography and radiography. chiropractic care using an upper cervical technique was administered to correct and stabilize the patient's upper neck injury. Assessments at baseline, 2 months, and 4 months were conducted by the patient's neurologist. After 1 month of care, the patient reported an absence of seizures and manic episodes and improved sleep patterns. After 4 months of care, seizures and manic episodes remained absent and migraine headaches were reduced from 3 per week to 2 per month. After 7 months of care, the patient reported the complete absence of symptoms. Eighteen months later, the patient remains asymptomatic. CONCLUSION: The onset of the symptoms following the patient's accident, the immediate reduction in symptoms correlating with the initiation of care, and the complete absence of all symptoms within 7 months of care suggest a link between the patient's headfirst fall, the upper cervical subluxation, and his neurological conditions. Further investigation into upper cervical trauma as a contributing factor to bipolar disorder, sleep disorder, seizure disorder, and migraine headaches should be pursued.
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ranking = 0.11056354875298
keywords = headache, upper
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9/33. Hypnic headache responsive to indomethacin: second Italian case.

    We report a case of hypnic headache (HH) fulfilling the criteria proposed by the revised IHS headache classification and rapidly responsive to indomethacin. The patient is a 70-year-old housewife who presented with a 7-year history of strictly nocturnal headache attacks. The headache occurred every night with a frequency of 1 to 2 attacks occurring between 03.00 and 04.00 a.m. indomethacin was prescribed at a daily dose of 150 mg/day for 30 days and tapered down in 15 days. Pain did not occur thereafter and at follow up, nine months after discontinuation of the drug, the patient was still pain-free with no relapses. This is the second Italian HH patient responsive to indomethacin, indicating that indomethacin may be a useful alternative treatment in HH patients, and providing further evidence in favour of a common pathophysiological mechanism in HH and other indomethacin-responsive primary headaches.
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ranking = 0.14123629999666
keywords = headache
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10/33. A sleep study in cluster headache.

    cluster headache (CH) is a primary headache with a close relation to sleep. CH presents a circa-annual rhythmicity; attacks occur preferably during the night, in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and they are associated with autonomic and neuroendocrine modifications. The posterior hypothalamus is the key structure for the biological phenomenon of CH. Our aim is to describe a 55-year-old man presenting a typical episodic CH, in whom we performed a prolonged sleep study, consisting of a 9-week actigraphic recording and repeated polysomnography, with evaluation of both sleep macrostructure and microstructure. During the acute bout of the cluster we observed an irregular sleep-wake pattern and abnormalities of REM sleep. After the cluster phase these alterations remitted. We conclude that CH was associated, in this patient, with sleep dysregulation involving the biological clock and the arousal mechanisms, particularly in REM. All these abnormalities are consistent with posterior hypothalamic dysfunction.
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ranking = 0.094157533331108
keywords = headache
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