Pergolide given as a single low-to-medium bedtime dose in combination with domperidone provides a well-tolerated and effective treatment of sensorimotor symptoms and sleep disturbances in patients with primary RLS.
Sinus arrest and atrioventricular (AV) block have been demonstrated in as much as 30% of patients with sleep apnea (SA). The reversal of heart block after tracheostomy has been shown. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) now is widely used as the treatment of SA, but little data are available on the effect of nCPAP on heart block in patients with SA. During a 17-mo period 239 patients were found to have SA in an ambulatory study. Heart block was identified in 17 (16 male, one female) of these patients. Standard polysomnography and two-channel long-term ECG before and during nCPAP therapy were performed in order to assess the effect of nCPAP on SA and heart block. Mean age of the 17 patients was 50.7 yr (range, 27 to 78 yr), mean respiratory disturbance index (RDI) was 90/h (SD +/- 36.1) before nCPAP and 6/h (SD +/- 6.2) on the second treatment night. The number of episodes of heart block during sleep decreased significantly (p < 0.001) from 1,575 before therapy to 165 during nCPAP. In 12 patients (70.6%) heart block was totally prevented by nCPAP. In another three patients, there was a 71 to 97% reduction in the number of episodes of heart block on the second treatment night, and in two of them a complete reversal occurred thereafter. Two patients exhibited an increase in block frequency during nCPAP, which was reversed after 4 wk of nCPAP in one but persisted in the other.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Nocturnal gastro-oesophageal reflux has been observed in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). Negative intrathoracic pressure during apnoeas and arousal have been suggested as the underlying mechanisms.In order to evaluate this hypothesis, the coincidence and sequence in time of arousal, apnoea and reflux events were analysed. Fifteen patients with OSA or heavy snoring were studied by means of standard polysomnograpy with parallel recording of 24-h oesophageal pH.Reflux events during the day were present in all patients, five of whom had symptoms of reflux. In three of these and in five other patients, a total of 69 nocturnal reflux events were found. In 68 events, arousal was found with the reflux event. Only one reflux without arousal was found (sleep stage 2). Seventeen events occurred during wakefulness after sleep onset. The percentage of time with a pH of <4 during wakefulness after sleep onset was significantly higher than the percentage of time with a pH of <4 during total sleep time (p<0.05). In 37 of the 52 reflux events which occurred during sleep, either an apnoea or a hypopnoea was found prior to the event. The investigation of sequence in time did not prove a causal relation between respiratory events and reflux events.The results indicate that gastro-oesophageal reflux and obstructive sleep apnoea are two separate disorders, which both have a high prevalence in obese patients.
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