2000
DOI: 10.1007/s11325-000-0001-5
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Primary Care: Is It the Setting to Address Sleep Disorders?

Abstract: lation than in the general population, and very likely at higher levels of severity. Why might this be true? One reason is the nature of medical practice, where most encounters (> 85%) are for chronic and acute disease. 1 This results in an enriched profile for risk factors. For example, in the Cleveland cohort studied with the Berlin Questionnaire (see Appendix), 50% of a consecutively studied primary care patient population was obese and/or hypertensive. 2 Moreover, such patients were more likely to visit th… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Primary care has a central role for recognizing cases of OSAS in the community 4. Patients attending primary care clinics tend to have a higher risk for OSAS because these patients often have chronic illnesses that are associated with OSAS.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Primary care has a central role for recognizing cases of OSAS in the community 4. Patients attending primary care clinics tend to have a higher risk for OSAS because these patients often have chronic illnesses that are associated with OSAS.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other studies of primary care populations, the estimated prevalence of diagnosed OSAHS is approximately 0.3% in contrast to the 20 to 30 times greater community prevalence of those with persistent sleepiness and snoring or those regarded as being at high risk for moderate to severe illness. 3 The Sleep Heart Health Study (SHHS) is a multicenter longitudinal study of the relationship of sleep-disordered breathing and cardiovascular diseases in nine community-based parent cohorts across the United States. Details of the rationale, study design, and primary hypotheses of the SHHS have been published.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One usually assumes that this occurs as a result of an enrichment of risk factors including co-morbidity and the length of illness that results in referral to a specialty clinic. Although recognition of sleep apnea is rather uncommon in primary care [18], there are papers that suggest that OSA can be recognized in primary care offices by the presence of new-onset pre-tibial edema and/ or unexplained pulmonary hypertension [19,20]. What is unresolved in these studies as well as in the current literature is whether or not pulmonary hypertension by itself can be the sole presenting feature of OSAHS or is captured by current recognition strategies that focus on presenting symptoms like snoring and sleepiness rather than abnormal physical or laboratory findings.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%