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Nagaraju B
•1
Sleep Disorder
•2
 Sleep disorders are common
 Sleep disorders are serious
 Sleep disorders are treatable
 Sleep disorders are under diagnosed
Introduction
___________________________
•3
 Sleep complaints are usually not due to
psychiatric conditions.
 Most sleep disorders are readily
diagnosable and treatable
 The studies include
 Polysomnography (PSG)
 Multiple sleep latency test (MSLT)
 Actigraphy (It is a relatively non-invasive
method of monitoring human rest/activity
cycles)
Introduction …
___________________________
Polysomnography
 All-night recording of:
 Eye movement
 Electroencephalogram( EEG)
 Electrocardiogram(ECG)
 Electromyogram (EMG) [technique for evaluating
and recording the activation signal of muscles]
 Ear Oximetry (non-invasive method allowing the
monitoring of the oxygenation of a patient's
hemoglobin), air flow at nose and mouth
 Thoracic and abdominal wall motion
 Physiological assessment: Esophageal pH
•4
Common Diagnostic Tests
Multiple Sleep Latency
Test(MSLT)
 Is a measure of daytime sleepiness:
 five brief naps at 2hrs interval
 the time necessary to fall asleep is measured for
each of the naps
 EEG, EMG, eye movement are monitored.
•5
Common Diagnostic Tests
•6
Wake System
___________________________
•7
Sleep System
___________________________
•8
Sleep Wake Cycle
___________________________
•9
Sleep
Cycle
•10
•Stage 1: Very light sleep
•Stage 2: Light sleep
•Stage 3: Deeper sleep
•Stage 4: Very deep sleep, most restorative
•Stage 5: REM sleep, when we dream
NREM
Types of Sleep Disorders
___________________________
•11
1. Insomnia.
2. Hypersomnia.
3. Parasomnia.
4. Sleep Related Breathing Disorders (Sleep
Apnea).
5. Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder.
Insomnia - Definition
___________________________
 Insomnia and excessive daytime sleepiness are primary complaints
regardless of the stage of the disease
 Insomnia includes difficulty falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep, and
early morning awakening
 Insomnia is not defined by the number of hours of sleep, but rather, by
an individual‘s ability to sleep long enough to feel healthy and alert
during the day.
 The normal requirement for sleep ranges between 4 and 10 hours.
 Insomnia is a symptom, not a disorder by itself
•12
Insomnia - Assessment
___________________________
 Determine the pattern of sleep problem
(frequency, associated events, how long it takes to go
to sleep, and how long the patient can stay asleep)
 Include a full history of alcohol and caffeine intake and
other factors that might affect sleep
 Review current medications that patient is taking to
eliminate these as possible causes
 Take a history to rule out physical cause and/or
psychosocial cause
•13
Headache
Bad or vivid dreams
Problems of breathing
Chest pain/heartburn
Need to pass urine or
move bowels
Abdominal pains
Fever/night sweats
Leg cramps
Fear/anxiety
Depression
Possible Causes of Insomnia
___________________________
•14
Insomnia – Associated Problems
___________________________
•15
At least one (or more) of the following
 Malaise (feeling of general discomfort or uneasiness)
 Attention, concentration impairment
 Social/ vocational dysfunction/ poor work
 Mood disturbance or irritability
 Daytime sleepiness
 Proneness for errors or accidents at work or while
driving
 Tension, headaches or gastrointestinal symptoms in
response to sleep loss
 Concerns or worries about sleep
Medications that causes Insomnia
___________________________
•16
Type of medication Example
CNS stimulants D-amphetamine, Methyphenindrate
Blood pressure drugs  - blockers,  - blockers
Respiratory medicines Albuterol, Theophylline
Decongestants Phenylephine, Pseudoephedrine
Hormones Thyroxin, Corticosteroids
Other substances Alcohol, Nicotine, Caffeine
Types of Insomnia
________________________
 Transient insomnia
 < 4 weeks triggered by excitement or stress, occurs
when away from home
 Short-term
 4 wks to 6 months , ongoing stress at home or work,
medical problems, psychiatric illness
 Chronic
 Poor sleep every night or most nights for > 6
months, psychological factors (prevalence 9%)
•17
Management of Insomnia
___________________________
 Treat underlying causes whenever possible
 Advise patient to avoid exercise, heavy
meals, alcohol, or conflict situations just
before bed
 Plain aspirin or paracetamol in low doses
may be helpful; or give short-acting
hypnotics or a sedative
 Treat underlying depression
•18
Non-Pharmacologic Management
__________________________
•19
 Go to bed when sleepy
 Get up the same time every morning
 Get up when sleep onset does not occur in
20 min, and go to another room
 No daytime napping
 Reduce or stop Caffeine, Alcohol, Nicotine
 Exercise < 4hrs before bed
 Meditation, Yoga
 Hypnosis to ↓ anxiety & tension at bedtime
 Progressive muscle relaxation
Pharmacologic Management
__________________________
•20
 Benzodiazepines
 Lorazepam (1-6mg)
 Clonezepam (0.5-5mg)
 Temazepam (10-20mg)
 Flurazepam (15-30mg)
 Alprazolam (0.25-1mg)
 Triazolam(0.125-0.25mg)
 Non Benzodiazepines
 Zolpidem (10-20mg HS)
Other classes of Medications
__________________________
•21
 Melatonin Receptor Agonists
 Melatonin (2-10mg)
 Antidepressants
 Trazadone (500-200mg)
 Mirtazapine (15-45mg)
 Doxepin (50-150mg)
 Amitryptyline (50-200mg)
 Antipsychotics
 Olanzapine (2.5-10mg)
BzRAs – side effects and safety
__________________________
 Amnesia
 Residual sedation – longer acting BzRAs
 Abuse and dependence
 Prolonged use can lead to withdrawal symptoms:
headache, irritability, dizziness, abnormal sleep
 Rebound insomnia - triazolam
 Increased fall risk, cognitive effects in the elderly
•22
Benzodiazepine use
____________________________
 Benzodiazepines are the drugs of choice for the
treatment of insomnia.
 Flurazepam can be used for up to one month with
little tolerance.
 Temazepam can be used for up to three months with
little tolerance.
 Intermittent use recommended (every three days).
Use for no longer than 3 – 6 months.
 Benzodiazepines with short half lives may be best for
patients with difficulty falling asleep, but can produce
rebound insomnia
•23
Barbiturates
____________________________
Drug Dose
(mg)
Duration of
action
Half-life
Phenobarbitone 30-210 Long 24 – 140 hrs.
Amobarbital 50-200 Short-
intermediate
8 – 42 hrs.
Pentobarbital 150-200 Short-
intermediate
15 – 48 hrs.
Secobarbital 8-250 Short-
intermediate
19 – 34 hrs.
•24
Hypersomnia: Narcolepsy
Extreme daytime sleepiness
Frequent brief naps
Rare, familial, presents in 20s and 30s
Requires sleep study and daytime
Main Symptoms
 Cataplexy (sudden, usually brief loss of muscle tone
induced by emotions.)
 Sleep paralysis: A symptom of narcolepsy; paralysis
occurring just before a person falls asleep.
 Hypnagogic hallucinations - REM sleep while
conscious
•25
Narcolepsy :Diagnosis
 History
 Multiple Sleep Latency Test(MSLT)
 excessive daytime sleepiness
 mean sleep latency than 5 minutes
 Sleep onset REM
•26
Drugs Used to Treat Narcolepsy
•27
Parasomnias
•28
 Parasomnias are a category of sleep disorders that
involve abnormal and unnatural movements,
behaviors, emotions, perceptions, and dreams that
occur while falling asleep, sleeping, between sleep
stages, or arousal from sleep. Most parasomnias are
dissociated sleep states which are partial arousals
during the transitions between wakefulness and
NREM sleep, or wakefulness and REM sleep.
 Types:
Restless Leg Syndrome
Night Terror
Sleepwalking (Somnambulism)
Sleep Enuresis
REM Sleep behaviour
Parasomnias: Restless Leg Syndrome
 Intense dysesthesias (unpleasant abnormal
sensation), repetitive jerking
- Worse at bedtime
- Often awakens patient
- Often familial, progresses with age
 Etiology unknown
 May be caused by uremia, Iron deficiency anemia or
alcohol abuse.
 Treatment
- Carbidopa-Levodopa 25mg/100mg qhs (70%
respond)
- Clonazepam 0.5-2 mg qhs
•29
Parasomnias: Night Terror
 Sleep Terrors
 Emerge from Stage 3-4 sleep
 Autonomic arousal is interpreted as fear
 Arousal is abrupt
 Occurs primarily in children
 Sudden arousal from slow wave sleep :
 cry
 automatic and behavioral manifestation of intense
fear(marked tachycardia, mydriasis sweating).The
child is agitated and confused.
 lasts for few minutes, sleep resumes. Amnesia +
 Treatment: reassurance, diazepam, imipramine
•30
Parasomnias: Sleepwalking (Somnambulism)
 Emerge out of Stage 3 and 4 sleep
 May overlap with night terror
 Involves complex behavior
 sitting up in bed, walking, dressing, eating and
even driving a car.
 lasts few minutes
 mostly in children
 Treatment: reassurance, safety restraints and if
frequent consider diazepam
•31
Parasomnias: Sleep Enuresis
 Involuntary micturation during sleep following
attainment of control while awake
 usually idiopathic
 may be caused by urogenital disease, or other
medical problem
 it may represent delayed micturation
 Treatment: bladder training, Imipramine
•32
Parasomnias: REM Sleep behavior
 REM Behavior Disorder
 A rare neurological disorder in which a person
does not become paralyzed during REM sleep,
and thus acts out dreams.
 Experiments with cats. Lesions to cellular nucleus
in the medial medulla near LC. Form inhibitory
synapses with motor neurons.
 Lack of REM atonia allows patient to enact his
dreams.
 Motor activity may be harmful
 most patients are elderly
 The condition usually idiopathic
 Neurological cause in 1/3rd.
 Treatment: sleep study, clonazepam
•33
Sleep-Disordered Breathing
(Sleep Apnea)
 Symptoms include loud snoring, choking,
gasping during sleep
 Associated with daytime sleepiness
 Risk factors include:
 Older age
 Male sex
 CVD risk factors such as obesity
Sleep apnea’s are divided into two:
 Central sleep apnea: (CSA) causes fragmented sleep
and consequent daytime somnolence.
 Obstructive sleep apnea:(OSA) is characterized by
partial or complete closure of the upper airway, posterior
from the nasal septum to the epiglottis, during inspiration
•34
Pathogenesis
 Occlusion of the oropharyngeal airway results in progressive
asphyxia (condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the
body that arises from being unable to breathe normally) until
there is a brief arousal from sleep, whereupon airway patency
is restored and airflow resumes.
 The patient then returns to sleep and the process is repeated,
up to 300 - 400 times per night & sleep becomes fragmented.
 During wakefulness upper airway muscle activity is greater than
normal to compensate for airway narrowing and high airway
resistance
• Normal Snoring Sleep Apnea
•35
Etiology
•36
 Obesity as a risk factor
 Anatomical abnormalities like neck obesity,
narrow airway, and fixed upper airway lesions
(e.g., polyps, enlarged tonsils)
 Alcohol
Diagnostic Tests of Sleep Apnea
 Polysomnography is a detailed overnight
sleep study with recordings of:
 ECG (arrhythmias), EEG (brain waves – level
of sleep )
 Ventilatory variables: movement of chest wall
and airflow at the mouth and nose
 Arterial O2 saturation (finger/ear-oximetry)
 Heart rate
•37
Management
 upper airway muscle tone: mild OSA – avoid alcohol and
sedatives
 upper airway lumen size: 1.Mild to moderate OSA –weight
reduction, avoid supine position and use oral prosthesis to keep
airway patent
2.Severe OSA: Surgery (uvulopalatopharyngoplasty)
 Bypass occlusion: severe OSA – tracheotomy
 – Weight Loss
 – Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
 – Medication
The most important pharmacologic intervention is the avoidance
of all CNS depressants (e.g., alcohol, hypnotics) and drugs that
promote weight gain. There is no drug therapy for OSA.
 Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) (i.e., imipramine, protriptyline),
and clonidine have effects on sleep architecture or upper airway
patency but do not clinically improve severity of OSA.
•38
•39
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM DISORDER
 The sleep-wake cycle is under the circadian
control of oscillators and can be disrupted by
misalignment between an individual’s biologic
clock and external demands on the sleep cycle.
 Circadian rhythm sleep disorders usually present
with either insomnia or hypersomnia, depending
on the individual’s performance requirements.
 Two commonly occurring circadian rhythm sleep
disorders are jet lag and shift work sleep
problems.
Jet Lag
•Jet lag occurs when a person travels across time
zones, and the external environmental time is
mismatched with the internal circadian clock.
•Symptoms: malaise, insomnia / hypersomnia,
fatigue, poor performance, gastrointestinal
disturbance.
•Treatment: Short-acting benzodiazepine receptor
agonists or 0.5 to 5 mg melatonin taken at
appropriate target bedtimes
•40
Shift Work
• Night shift work causes a misalignment in the
sleep-wake cycle and circadian rhythm that is
associated with a decrease in alertness,
performance, and quality of daytime sleep.
•Treatment: Short-acting benzodiazepine receptor
agonists or 0.5 to 5 mg melatonin taken at
appropriate target bedtimes
•41
Principles of Sleep Hygiene
 Sleep in cool, quiet, comfortable place.
 Keep regular sleep-wake schedule.
 When having trouble sleeping at night, avoid daytime
naps.
 Exercise < 4hrs before bed.
 Avoid caffeine, food close to bedtime.
 Make bed a restful heaven for sleep.
 Don’t worry about not getting enough sleep .
 Change sleeping place, if unable to sleep.
•42
Thank you
Have a nice Sleep
•43

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Sleep Disorders Guide: Types, Symptoms and Treatments

  • 2. •2  Sleep disorders are common  Sleep disorders are serious  Sleep disorders are treatable  Sleep disorders are under diagnosed Introduction ___________________________
  • 3. •3  Sleep complaints are usually not due to psychiatric conditions.  Most sleep disorders are readily diagnosable and treatable  The studies include  Polysomnography (PSG)  Multiple sleep latency test (MSLT)  Actigraphy (It is a relatively non-invasive method of monitoring human rest/activity cycles) Introduction … ___________________________
  • 4. Polysomnography  All-night recording of:  Eye movement  Electroencephalogram( EEG)  Electrocardiogram(ECG)  Electromyogram (EMG) [technique for evaluating and recording the activation signal of muscles]  Ear Oximetry (non-invasive method allowing the monitoring of the oxygenation of a patient's hemoglobin), air flow at nose and mouth  Thoracic and abdominal wall motion  Physiological assessment: Esophageal pH •4 Common Diagnostic Tests
  • 5. Multiple Sleep Latency Test(MSLT)  Is a measure of daytime sleepiness:  five brief naps at 2hrs interval  the time necessary to fall asleep is measured for each of the naps  EEG, EMG, eye movement are monitored. •5 Common Diagnostic Tests
  • 10. Sleep Cycle •10 •Stage 1: Very light sleep •Stage 2: Light sleep •Stage 3: Deeper sleep •Stage 4: Very deep sleep, most restorative •Stage 5: REM sleep, when we dream NREM
  • 11. Types of Sleep Disorders ___________________________ •11 1. Insomnia. 2. Hypersomnia. 3. Parasomnia. 4. Sleep Related Breathing Disorders (Sleep Apnea). 5. Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder.
  • 12. Insomnia - Definition ___________________________  Insomnia and excessive daytime sleepiness are primary complaints regardless of the stage of the disease  Insomnia includes difficulty falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep, and early morning awakening  Insomnia is not defined by the number of hours of sleep, but rather, by an individual‘s ability to sleep long enough to feel healthy and alert during the day.  The normal requirement for sleep ranges between 4 and 10 hours.  Insomnia is a symptom, not a disorder by itself •12
  • 13. Insomnia - Assessment ___________________________  Determine the pattern of sleep problem (frequency, associated events, how long it takes to go to sleep, and how long the patient can stay asleep)  Include a full history of alcohol and caffeine intake and other factors that might affect sleep  Review current medications that patient is taking to eliminate these as possible causes  Take a history to rule out physical cause and/or psychosocial cause •13
  • 14. Headache Bad or vivid dreams Problems of breathing Chest pain/heartburn Need to pass urine or move bowels Abdominal pains Fever/night sweats Leg cramps Fear/anxiety Depression Possible Causes of Insomnia ___________________________ •14
  • 15. Insomnia – Associated Problems ___________________________ •15 At least one (or more) of the following  Malaise (feeling of general discomfort or uneasiness)  Attention, concentration impairment  Social/ vocational dysfunction/ poor work  Mood disturbance or irritability  Daytime sleepiness  Proneness for errors or accidents at work or while driving  Tension, headaches or gastrointestinal symptoms in response to sleep loss  Concerns or worries about sleep
  • 16. Medications that causes Insomnia ___________________________ •16 Type of medication Example CNS stimulants D-amphetamine, Methyphenindrate Blood pressure drugs  - blockers,  - blockers Respiratory medicines Albuterol, Theophylline Decongestants Phenylephine, Pseudoephedrine Hormones Thyroxin, Corticosteroids Other substances Alcohol, Nicotine, Caffeine
  • 17. Types of Insomnia ________________________  Transient insomnia  < 4 weeks triggered by excitement or stress, occurs when away from home  Short-term  4 wks to 6 months , ongoing stress at home or work, medical problems, psychiatric illness  Chronic  Poor sleep every night or most nights for > 6 months, psychological factors (prevalence 9%) •17
  • 18. Management of Insomnia ___________________________  Treat underlying causes whenever possible  Advise patient to avoid exercise, heavy meals, alcohol, or conflict situations just before bed  Plain aspirin or paracetamol in low doses may be helpful; or give short-acting hypnotics or a sedative  Treat underlying depression •18
  • 19. Non-Pharmacologic Management __________________________ •19  Go to bed when sleepy  Get up the same time every morning  Get up when sleep onset does not occur in 20 min, and go to another room  No daytime napping  Reduce or stop Caffeine, Alcohol, Nicotine  Exercise < 4hrs before bed  Meditation, Yoga  Hypnosis to ↓ anxiety & tension at bedtime  Progressive muscle relaxation
  • 20. Pharmacologic Management __________________________ •20  Benzodiazepines  Lorazepam (1-6mg)  Clonezepam (0.5-5mg)  Temazepam (10-20mg)  Flurazepam (15-30mg)  Alprazolam (0.25-1mg)  Triazolam(0.125-0.25mg)  Non Benzodiazepines  Zolpidem (10-20mg HS)
  • 21. Other classes of Medications __________________________ •21  Melatonin Receptor Agonists  Melatonin (2-10mg)  Antidepressants  Trazadone (500-200mg)  Mirtazapine (15-45mg)  Doxepin (50-150mg)  Amitryptyline (50-200mg)  Antipsychotics  Olanzapine (2.5-10mg)
  • 22. BzRAs – side effects and safety __________________________  Amnesia  Residual sedation – longer acting BzRAs  Abuse and dependence  Prolonged use can lead to withdrawal symptoms: headache, irritability, dizziness, abnormal sleep  Rebound insomnia - triazolam  Increased fall risk, cognitive effects in the elderly •22
  • 23. Benzodiazepine use ____________________________  Benzodiazepines are the drugs of choice for the treatment of insomnia.  Flurazepam can be used for up to one month with little tolerance.  Temazepam can be used for up to three months with little tolerance.  Intermittent use recommended (every three days). Use for no longer than 3 – 6 months.  Benzodiazepines with short half lives may be best for patients with difficulty falling asleep, but can produce rebound insomnia •23
  • 24. Barbiturates ____________________________ Drug Dose (mg) Duration of action Half-life Phenobarbitone 30-210 Long 24 – 140 hrs. Amobarbital 50-200 Short- intermediate 8 – 42 hrs. Pentobarbital 150-200 Short- intermediate 15 – 48 hrs. Secobarbital 8-250 Short- intermediate 19 – 34 hrs. •24
  • 25. Hypersomnia: Narcolepsy Extreme daytime sleepiness Frequent brief naps Rare, familial, presents in 20s and 30s Requires sleep study and daytime Main Symptoms  Cataplexy (sudden, usually brief loss of muscle tone induced by emotions.)  Sleep paralysis: A symptom of narcolepsy; paralysis occurring just before a person falls asleep.  Hypnagogic hallucinations - REM sleep while conscious •25
  • 26. Narcolepsy :Diagnosis  History  Multiple Sleep Latency Test(MSLT)  excessive daytime sleepiness  mean sleep latency than 5 minutes  Sleep onset REM •26
  • 27. Drugs Used to Treat Narcolepsy •27
  • 28. Parasomnias •28  Parasomnias are a category of sleep disorders that involve abnormal and unnatural movements, behaviors, emotions, perceptions, and dreams that occur while falling asleep, sleeping, between sleep stages, or arousal from sleep. Most parasomnias are dissociated sleep states which are partial arousals during the transitions between wakefulness and NREM sleep, or wakefulness and REM sleep.  Types: Restless Leg Syndrome Night Terror Sleepwalking (Somnambulism) Sleep Enuresis REM Sleep behaviour
  • 29. Parasomnias: Restless Leg Syndrome  Intense dysesthesias (unpleasant abnormal sensation), repetitive jerking - Worse at bedtime - Often awakens patient - Often familial, progresses with age  Etiology unknown  May be caused by uremia, Iron deficiency anemia or alcohol abuse.  Treatment - Carbidopa-Levodopa 25mg/100mg qhs (70% respond) - Clonazepam 0.5-2 mg qhs •29
  • 30. Parasomnias: Night Terror  Sleep Terrors  Emerge from Stage 3-4 sleep  Autonomic arousal is interpreted as fear  Arousal is abrupt  Occurs primarily in children  Sudden arousal from slow wave sleep :  cry  automatic and behavioral manifestation of intense fear(marked tachycardia, mydriasis sweating).The child is agitated and confused.  lasts for few minutes, sleep resumes. Amnesia +  Treatment: reassurance, diazepam, imipramine •30
  • 31. Parasomnias: Sleepwalking (Somnambulism)  Emerge out of Stage 3 and 4 sleep  May overlap with night terror  Involves complex behavior  sitting up in bed, walking, dressing, eating and even driving a car.  lasts few minutes  mostly in children  Treatment: reassurance, safety restraints and if frequent consider diazepam •31
  • 32. Parasomnias: Sleep Enuresis  Involuntary micturation during sleep following attainment of control while awake  usually idiopathic  may be caused by urogenital disease, or other medical problem  it may represent delayed micturation  Treatment: bladder training, Imipramine •32
  • 33. Parasomnias: REM Sleep behavior  REM Behavior Disorder  A rare neurological disorder in which a person does not become paralyzed during REM sleep, and thus acts out dreams.  Experiments with cats. Lesions to cellular nucleus in the medial medulla near LC. Form inhibitory synapses with motor neurons.  Lack of REM atonia allows patient to enact his dreams.  Motor activity may be harmful  most patients are elderly  The condition usually idiopathic  Neurological cause in 1/3rd.  Treatment: sleep study, clonazepam •33
  • 34. Sleep-Disordered Breathing (Sleep Apnea)  Symptoms include loud snoring, choking, gasping during sleep  Associated with daytime sleepiness  Risk factors include:  Older age  Male sex  CVD risk factors such as obesity Sleep apnea’s are divided into two:  Central sleep apnea: (CSA) causes fragmented sleep and consequent daytime somnolence.  Obstructive sleep apnea:(OSA) is characterized by partial or complete closure of the upper airway, posterior from the nasal septum to the epiglottis, during inspiration •34
  • 35. Pathogenesis  Occlusion of the oropharyngeal airway results in progressive asphyxia (condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the body that arises from being unable to breathe normally) until there is a brief arousal from sleep, whereupon airway patency is restored and airflow resumes.  The patient then returns to sleep and the process is repeated, up to 300 - 400 times per night & sleep becomes fragmented.  During wakefulness upper airway muscle activity is greater than normal to compensate for airway narrowing and high airway resistance • Normal Snoring Sleep Apnea •35
  • 36. Etiology •36  Obesity as a risk factor  Anatomical abnormalities like neck obesity, narrow airway, and fixed upper airway lesions (e.g., polyps, enlarged tonsils)  Alcohol
  • 37. Diagnostic Tests of Sleep Apnea  Polysomnography is a detailed overnight sleep study with recordings of:  ECG (arrhythmias), EEG (brain waves – level of sleep )  Ventilatory variables: movement of chest wall and airflow at the mouth and nose  Arterial O2 saturation (finger/ear-oximetry)  Heart rate •37
  • 38. Management  upper airway muscle tone: mild OSA – avoid alcohol and sedatives  upper airway lumen size: 1.Mild to moderate OSA –weight reduction, avoid supine position and use oral prosthesis to keep airway patent 2.Severe OSA: Surgery (uvulopalatopharyngoplasty)  Bypass occlusion: severe OSA – tracheotomy  – Weight Loss  – Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)  – Medication The most important pharmacologic intervention is the avoidance of all CNS depressants (e.g., alcohol, hypnotics) and drugs that promote weight gain. There is no drug therapy for OSA.  Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) (i.e., imipramine, protriptyline), and clonidine have effects on sleep architecture or upper airway patency but do not clinically improve severity of OSA. •38
  • 39. •39 CIRCADIAN RHYTHM DISORDER  The sleep-wake cycle is under the circadian control of oscillators and can be disrupted by misalignment between an individual’s biologic clock and external demands on the sleep cycle.  Circadian rhythm sleep disorders usually present with either insomnia or hypersomnia, depending on the individual’s performance requirements.  Two commonly occurring circadian rhythm sleep disorders are jet lag and shift work sleep problems.
  • 40. Jet Lag •Jet lag occurs when a person travels across time zones, and the external environmental time is mismatched with the internal circadian clock. •Symptoms: malaise, insomnia / hypersomnia, fatigue, poor performance, gastrointestinal disturbance. •Treatment: Short-acting benzodiazepine receptor agonists or 0.5 to 5 mg melatonin taken at appropriate target bedtimes •40
  • 41. Shift Work • Night shift work causes a misalignment in the sleep-wake cycle and circadian rhythm that is associated with a decrease in alertness, performance, and quality of daytime sleep. •Treatment: Short-acting benzodiazepine receptor agonists or 0.5 to 5 mg melatonin taken at appropriate target bedtimes •41
  • 42. Principles of Sleep Hygiene  Sleep in cool, quiet, comfortable place.  Keep regular sleep-wake schedule.  When having trouble sleeping at night, avoid daytime naps.  Exercise < 4hrs before bed.  Avoid caffeine, food close to bedtime.  Make bed a restful heaven for sleep.  Don’t worry about not getting enough sleep .  Change sleeping place, if unable to sleep. •42
  • 43. Thank you Have a nice Sleep •43