Sleep (Knowles) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 normal physiologic levels of consciousness?

What is the “reversible behavioral state of perceptual disengagement from and unresponsiveness to the environment” ?

A
  • Awake
  • NREM sleep
  • REM sleep
  • the Behavioral definition of sleep
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2
Q

What are the 2 independent forces that impact sleep?

A
  • Circadian rhythm
  • Sleep debt
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3
Q

NREM sleep:

  • Divided into ___ stages
  • During normal sleep onset into NREM sleep -
    • _____ in muscle tone
    • slow eye movements, possibly ______
    • Loss of ______, low voltage mixed frequency
  • What are the stages differentiated by?
A
  • 4 stages
    • Decrease
    • asynchronous
    • classic alpha rhythm
  • Presence of electrographic phenomenon - degree of high voltage slow wave activity
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4
Q

REM sleep:

  • Electrographic background similar to _____ sleep or ______
  • Muscle _____, with intermittent twitches seen
  • eyes:
A
  • stage 1 NREM, or relaxed awake (loss of posterior dominant rhythm)
  • Atonia
  • Rapid eye movements
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5
Q

Sleep cycle:

  • Sleep is entered via the _____
  • Cycles between NREM and REM on average are ___ minute cycles
    • _____ predominates for the first 2/3 of the night
    • _____ predominates for the last 1/3

Classic distribution: 1: 2-5%, 2: 45-55%, 3: 3-8%, 4: 10-15%, REM: 20-25%

A
  • NREM sleep
  • 90 minutes
    • NREM
    • REM

N2 is the MAJORITY

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6
Q

Apnea:

  • _____: no effort to breathe, no air movement
  • _____: Effort to breathe, no air movement
  • _____: Initially no effort to breathe, but then makes respiratory effort without air movement
A
  • Central
  • Obstructive
  • Mixed
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7
Q

What is the difference between adult and child definitions of pbstructive sleep apnea?

A

Both have > 90% decrease in airflow compared to pre-event baseline; associated with continued/increased respiratory effort throughout the entire episode of absent airflow

  • Adults: lasts 10 seconds or greater
  • Child: Lasts the length of 2 breaths during baseline breathing
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8
Q

What are some clinical signs and symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea? (5)

(Observed apneas - by 75% of bed partners)

A
  • Loud, disruptive snoring
  • Periods of silence with gasps/snorts (snore arousal)
  • Restless sleep (50%)
  • Nocturia (28%, 4-7 nightly trips to the bathroom)
  • Nocturnal GERD
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9
Q

OSA:

  • Most common complaint is ______
  • ___ of reaction time
  • Personality changes - including:
  • ______ libido - impotence, ED, *** reversible
  • ~1/2 report morning/nocturnal _____
  • In children, more likely to report poor ____, ____, ____, ____ than daytime sleepiness
A
  • Daytime sleepiness/fatigue
  • Slowing
  • aggressiveness, irritability, anxiety, depression
  • Decreased
  • Headaches
  • attention, impulse control, distractibility, irritability
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10
Q

What are some treatment options for OSA?

  • Non-surgical
    • Behavioral? (3)
    • ___/____
    • Devices? (3)
    • Medications?
A
  • Weight loss, smoking cessation, body positioning
  • CPAP/BiPAP
  • Snore balls, oral appliances, nasal dilators
  • Nasal steroids, antidepressants, stimulants
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11
Q

What are some surgical treatment options for OSA?

  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
A
  • Tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy
  • UPP
  • Mandibular advancement
  • Tracheostomy
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12
Q

Hypersomnolence: is secondary to:

  • ______ sleep (OSAS, PLMD)
  • ______ sleep
  • ______ (recreational, prescription)
  • _______ effects - sleep phase disorders
  • ____/____ hypersomnolence
  • Other systemic disease (hypothyroidism)
A
  • Disrupted
  • Inadequate
  • Drugs
  • Chronobiologic
  • Narcolepsy/idiopathic
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13
Q

Diagnosis:

  • Excessive daytime sleepiness with abnormal REM sleep phenomenon
  • Presumed 2 hit hypothesis - genetic predisposition with environmental trigger
  • Changed classification:
    • type 1 - with cataplexy
    • type 2 - without cataplexy
A

Narcolepsy

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14
Q

What type?

  • Criteria A and B must be met:
    • A: The patient has daily periods of irrepressible need to sleep or daytime lapses into sleep occurring for at least 3 months
    • B: The present of 1 or both of the following:
      • _____ and a mean sleep latency of < or = 8 minutes and 2+ sleep onset REM periods on an MSLT performed according to standard techniques - A SOREMP within 15 min of sleep onset - on the preceding nocturnal polysomnogram may replace one of the SOREMPs on the MSLT
      • CSF hypocretin-1 concentration, measured by immunoreactivity is either < or = 100 pg/mL or <1/3 of mean values obtained in normal subjects with the same standardized assay
A

Type 1: Narcolepsy with Cataplexy

  • Cataplexy
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15
Q

What is defined as more than _____ episode of generally brief (<2 mins) usually ____ symmetrical sudden loss of muscle tone with retained consciousness?

  • Precipitated by strong emotions - usually +, some with laughter
  • Transient reversible loss of DTRs
  • In children: may present close to disease onset as facial hypotonia with droopy eyelids, mouth opening, protruded tongue, gait disturbance, facial/masticatory movements may occur (reward is a common precipitant)
A

Cataplexy

  • one
  • bilaterally
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16
Q

What type?

  • Criteria A-E must be met:
    • A: daily periods of irrepressible need to sleep or daytime lapses into sleep occurring for at least _____
    • B: Mean sleep latency of = 8 minutes and 2 or more sleep onset REM periods found on MSLT; a SOREMP on the preceding nocturnal polysomnogram may replase one of the SOREMPs on the MSLT
    • C: Cataplexy is absent
    • D: Either CSF hypocretin-1 concentration has not been measured or CSF hypocretin-1 concentration measured by immunoreactivity is either > 110 pg/mL or >1/3 of mean values obtained in normal subjects with the same standardized assay
    • E: Not better explained by other causes - insufficient sleep, OSA, delayed sleep phase disorder, effect of meds/substances/withdrawal
A

Type 2 - Narcolepsy

  • 3 months
17
Q

Hypocretin/Orexin:

  • 2 highly homologous neuropeptides - hypocretin 1 & 2
  • Found in only a few _____ cells, all in the _____ area of the ________
    • Extensive projections thoughout CNS, including?
    • Central administration of hypocretin-1 stimulates _____ and _____ REM sleep
A
  • thousand cells, perifornical, posterior hypothalamus
    • Limbic system
    • Monoaminegic cell groups
    • Intrahypothalamic nuclei
    • Cerebral cortex
    • Spinal cord
    • Thalamus
  • wakefullness, suppresses
18
Q

Hypocretin/Orexin:

In animal models, levels fluctuate over 24 hour cycle, suggest driven by ______ influences and indirectly by _______

A

Circadian, increased sleep debt

19
Q

What is the TETRAD of symptoms of Narcolepsy?

*** The last 3 are all REM phenomenon intruding into wakefulness

  • Other associated features - disrupted sleep, obesity, anxiety/panic attacks

Diagnostic evaluations: requires _____ to evaluate nightime sleep and document adequate sleep/mean sleep latency

A
  • Sleep attacks
  • Hypnogogic/hypnopompic hallucinations
  • Sleep paralysis
  • Cataplexy
  • Eval: overnight polysomnogram
20
Q

Treatment for narcolepsy?

  • Behavioral
    1. ?
    2. ?
    3. ?
  • Medications
    1. ?
    2. ?
A
  • Behavioral
    1. Adequate daytime sleep
    2. Daytime naps
    3. Keeping physically active
  • Medications
    1. Sleepiness - modafanil, amphetamines, atomoxetine
    2. Cataplexy - sodium oxybate, SSRIs
21
Q

What parasomnias occur during:

  1. REM sleep
  2. Non-REM sleep
  3. Other parasomnias without regard
A
  1. REM
    • REM behavior disorder
    • Painful erections
  2. Non-REM
    • Confusional arousals
    • Sleep walking
    • Sleep terrors
  3. Other
    • Bruxism
    • Sleep groaning/moaning
    • Rhythmic mvmt disorder
    • Enuresis
    • Sleep talking
22
Q

Diagnosis:

  • Loss of REM atonia, patient “acts out” dreams
  • Acute and Chronic forms
    • Acute - toxic/metabolic (EtOH/BZD withdrawal, biperiden intoxication)
    • Chronic - Idiopathic, neurologic disease (narcolepsy, EP disease, NPH, mitochondrial disease)
A

REM Behavior Disorder

23
Q

Diagnosis?

  • Tends to arise from slow wave sleep (N3-4)
  • Most common in 1st third of the night
  • Common in childhood, decreases with age
  • Frequently + family history
  • Medication induced cases reported
  • Arousals can provoke episodes
  • Increased tiredness, sleeping in unfamiliar place may increase likelihood of episode
A

Non-REM parasomnias

  • Confusional arousals
  • Sleep walking
  • Sleep terrors
24
Q

Sleep is entered via?

  • Slow wave sleep
  • REM sleep
  • NREM sleep
  • Varies
A

NREM sleep

25
Q

The majority of normal sleep is spent in stage…

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • R
A

2

26
Q

Most common complaint of OSAs Patients…

  • Snoring
  • Impotence
  • Daytime sleepiness
  • Headaches
A

Daytime sleepiness

27
Q

The narcolepsy tetras does NOT include:

  • Sleep paralysis
  • Confusional arousals
  • Sleep attacks
  • Cataplexy
  • Hypnogogic/hypnopompic hallucinations
A

Confusional arousals

28
Q

Which is not true of non-REM parasomnias…

  • More common in last 1/3 of the night
  • More common in children
  • Frequently a + family history
  • Can be a medication side effect
A

More common in last 1/3 of the night