Adults with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) display substantial heart rate changes associated with obstructive events, and recent reports suggest similar heart rate changes in children with OSAS. These rate changes could assist screening of young patients for OSAS. Six-hour polysomnographic recordings were obtained from seven children with OSAS (mean age: 4.5 years; apnea index: 19.5 +/- 5.1) and from seven primary snorers without OSAS who served as controls (mean age: 4.7; apnea index: 0). Scatterplots of each cardiac R-R interval against the preceding interval (Poincaré plots) were used to assess beat-to-beat cardiac variability at different heart rates. Beat-to-beat variation at slow rates was significantly increased in children with OSAS relative to controls, while variation at fast and intermediate heart rates was significantly reduced in these children. We conclude that OSAS alters beat-to-beat variation in characteristic fashions in children, that the variability changes occur at all heart rates but are most significant at slow heart rates, and that these heart rate patterns could assist in screening of suspected cases of OSAS.
The flow hydrograph, thickness of the winter ice cover, and stream morphology are three climate-influenced factors that govern river ice processes in general and ice breakup and jamming in particular. Considerable warming and changes in precipitation patterns, as predicted by general circulation models (GCMs) for various increased greenhouse-gas scenarios, would affect the length and duration of the ice season and the timing and severity of ice breakup. Climate-induced changes to river ice processes and the associated hydrologic regimes can produce physical, biological, and socioeconomic effects. Current knowledge of climatic impacts on the ice breakup regime of rivers and the future effects of a changing climate are discussed.Key words: breakup, climate change, global warming, greenhouse effect, hydrology, ice, ice jam, impacts, prediction, river ice.
Ventilatory responses to peripheral chemoreceptor stimuli are absent in patients with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) during wakefulness. Because arousal from sleep after rapidly developing hypoxia may require intact peripheral chemoreceptor function, we hypothesized that blunted hypoxic arousal responses during sleep Stage 3/4 would be present in PWS. Thirteen patients with PWS (mean age, 23.4 +/- 3.7 +/- SEM yr; 46% male; body mass index [BMI], 28.9 +/- 1.6 kg/m2) and 11 matched control subjects (mean age 28.0 +/- 5.4 yr; 54% male; BMI, 28.8 +/- 3.1 kg/m2) were studied. An abrupt decrease in inspired O2 tension to 80 mm Hg was introduced until arousal occurred or for a maximum of 3 min. One of the 13 patients with PWS and seven of the 11 control subjects were aroused by the hypoxic challenge (p < 0.02). During hypoxia, heart rate increased by 9 +/- 2% in the PWS group versus 22 +/- 4% in the control group (p < 0.005). Respiratory rate did not change in the PWS group (4 +/- 2%; p = NS), but it increased by 13 +/- 2% in the control group (p < 0.02). We conclude that abnormal arousal and cardiorespiratory responses to hypoxia are frequent in PWS. We postulate that intact peripheral chemoreceptor function is an important component underlying arousal mechanisms to rapidly developing hypoxia during sleep.
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