Sleep Disorders Flashcards
DDx of daytime sleepiness?
Insomnia Obstructive sleep apnoea. Central sleep apnoea. Night work Drugs: hypnotics, β-blockers. Parkinsonism Hypothyroidism Narcolepsy Idiopathic hypersomnolence
Normal sleep physiology:
Repeated cycles of 90-minute cycles of:
- Non-REM sleep then REM sleep.
What does REM stand for?
What happens to cycles through the night?
Which type does sleep occur in?
Non-REM (NREM)
REM
Rapid eye movement
Gets longer through the night
REM sleep
Central sleep apnoea:
What is it also called?
Define?
Nocturnal hypoventilation
- An interruption of breathing during sleep, without an obstructive cause.
- Chest wall function leading to loss of respiratory effort
Central sleep apnoea:
Causes mneumonic - APNO2EIC
Altitude
Primary central sleep apnoea (idiopathic)
Neuromuscular disease - muscular dystrophy, MND
Obesity hypoventilation syndrome (Pickwickian’s syndrome)
+ Opioids
Ejection fraction low - heart failure
Irregular spine - scoliosis
CNS disease - brainstem lesions from stroke
Central sleep apnoea:
Presentation:
- How do they come on?
- Pattern
- What part of sleep is it worse in?
- Why do they get morning headaches?
- What does it lead to during the day?
Management - 1
Episodes of apnoea
Crescendo then decrescendo pattern
Worse during REM sleep
CO2 retention
NIV
Insomnia:
What is it?
Management - sleep hygiene:
- What drinks should be avoided? - 2
- What should be avoided during the day?
- What should be added to their daily routine?
- What should be the only 2 things done in the bedroom?
- What stimulations should be avoided?
Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep resulting in distress or impaired function
Caffeine after 12 pm
Alcohol just before sleep
Exercise
Sleep and sex
No bright screens, big meals or exercise
Insomnia:
Management:
- Psych intervention
Pharmacological:
- What hormone can be given?
- What drugs can be given for short term severe and disabling crises?
- What antiemetic can also be used?
CBT
Melatonin for 3-10 wks
Benzodiazepines and Z-drugs
Sedating antihistamines
Narcolepsy:
What is the pathophysiology?
Onset
How is it diagnosed?
What is polysomnography?
Why is an MRI and EEG done?
Loss of alerting neurons, that produce hypocretin (aka orexin)
Teens to 20s
A sleep study is a test used to diagnose sleep disorders. Polysomnography records your brain waves, the oxygen level in your blood, heart rate and breathing, as well as eye and leg movements during the study.
MRI = excludes space-occupying lesion EEG = excludes epilepsy
Narcolepsy:
Management:
What should be done first?
2 stimulant meds used? - M, M
Who needs to be contacted?
Education, including sleep hygiene
Modafinil for daytime sleepiness - remember people on course using it for revision
Methylphenidate
DVLA
NREM parasomnias:
What is it?
How may it present - just read
Abnormal behaviours associated with sleep - the patient is semi-awake but dissociated during slow-wave sleep.
Night terror
Sleepwalking
Sexsomnia
Sleep-related eating disorder
REM behaviour disorder:
What is it?
What neuro diseases is it associated with?
What age and sex is commonly affected?
Loss of REM paralysis, leading to acting out dream content - a type of parasomnias.
PD and LBD
Middle age to elderly males