1 / 63

Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Excessive Daytime Sleepiness

Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Excessive Daytime Sleepiness. What is EDS?. Excessive daytime sleepiness The tendency to fall asleep during normal waking hours 1 Contrast with “fatigue” A desire to rest due to feelings of exhaustion 1 Symptom of underlying disorder.

joshua
Download Presentation

Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Excessive Daytime Sleepiness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Excessive Daytime Sleepiness

  2. What is EDS? • Excessive daytime sleepiness • The tendency to fall asleep during normal waking hours1 • Contrast with “fatigue” • A desire to rest due to feelings of exhaustion1 • Symptom of underlying disorder 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  3. EDS – a common complaint • Almost ½ of all Americans report a sleep-related problem1 • EDS is the primary complaint of 1 in 8 people seen in sleep clinics2 • More than 1 in 4 patients complain of EDS in the primary care setting3 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Roth T & Roehrs TA; Clin Ther.,1996; 3. Kushida CA, et al. Sleep Breath; 2000.

  4. EDS characteristics • Number of daily episodes vary • Occurs during passive activities • TV watching, sitting on a plane • Occurs during more active tasks • Driving, eating, speaking 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Bassetti C & Aldrich MS. Neuro Clin;1996.

  5. The Consequences of EDS

  6. Consequences to Self •  Productivity1,2 •  Motivation2 •  Interpersonal relationship problems2 •  Depression + anxiety1, 3 •  Insomnia1 •  Quality of life1,2 1. Hasler G, et al. J Clin Psychiatry; 2005; 2. Daniels E, et al. J Sleep Res; 2001; 3. Theorell-Haglow J, et al. Sleep; 2006.

  7. Consequences to Health • Sleepiness vs. blood pressure1 •  EDS symptoms = •  Sleep BP •  Daytime systolic/diastolic variability •  Anger, depression, anxiety • More likely to get a diagnosis of hypertension 1. Goldstein IB, et al. Am J Hypertens; 2004.

  8. Consequences to Health • Sleepiness vs. CVD in older adults1 •  EDS symptoms = •  CVD mortality • 200% in men; 40% in women •  CVD morbidity • 35% more MI and CHF in men; 66% more in women 1. Newman AB, et al. J Am Geriatr Soc; 2000.

  9. Consequences to Society • Crashes when driver falls asleep1 • 100,000 each year in U. S. • 1,500 deaths • Death rate may exceed alcohol-related crashes • ~1/2 of all work-related accidents2 • 1 in 5 public accidents due to falls2 1. Mahowald MW. Postgrad Med; 2000; 2. Leger D. Sleep; 1994.

  10. Drivers beware: sleepiness vs. drunkenness • Study compared effects on performance of sleep deprivation and alcohol1 • Drivers who went 17-19 hours without sleep = drivers with 0.05% BAC • Sleepy drivers responded ~50% more slowly/less accuracy than fully awake drivers • Sleepiness can compromise performance needed for road and job safety 1. Williamson AM & Feyer AM. Occup Environ Med; 2000.

  11. Patient assessment

  12. Is sleep the new vital sign? • Growing evidence shows that sleep is an important ingredient in good health1 • Few MDs address sleep quality in their practices • <10% of patient charts document sleep history2 • Sleep disorders are underdiagnosed, undertreated 1. Wilson JF. Am Coll Physicians; 2005; 2. Namen AM, et al. South Med J; 2001.

  13. Pathophysiology of EDS • EDS is not a disorder – but a symptom1 • Causes2: • CNS abnormalities, e. g. narcolepsy • Sleep deficiency, e. g. sleep apnea • Circadian imbalances, e. g. jet lag • Drug side effects, e. g. marijuana 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Roth T & Roehrs TA. Clin Ther; 1996.

  14. How does the patient report symptoms? • I’m tired • I feel lazy • I have low energy • I feel drowsy • I feel sleepy

  15. Assess for other psychiatric comorbidities • Symptoms of depression? • Mood or memory problems? • Does patient fall asleep suddenly? • Is the patient a “night owl”? • Does the patient drink or take drugs? • How many hours sleep per night, including weekends and weekdays?

  16. Epworth SleepinessScale • A quick, in-office test1 • Assesses whether a person will get sleepy in certain situations • Use this scale for each situation: • 0 = would never doze or sleep • 1 = slight chance of dozing or sleeping • 2 = moderate chance of dozing or sleeping • 3 = high chance of dozing or sleeping 1. Johns MW. Sleep; 1991.

  17. Epworth SleepinessScale 1. Johns MW. Sleep; 1991.

  18. Rule out other medical conditions1 • Stroke • Tumors/cysts • Vascular malformations • Head trauma • CNS infections (sleeping sickness) • Parkinsonism • Alzheimer's, other dementias 1. Black JE, et al. Neurol Clin; 2005.

  19. Differential Diagnosis

  20. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  21. Insufficient sleepsyndrome • Have patient keep a sleep log1 • Bedtimes • Number/time of awakenings • Arising times • Frequency/duration of naps • Bedtime events (food, alcohol, physical activity) 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  22. Falling asleep vs. staying asleep • Difficulty falling asleep1 • Suggests delayed sleep phase syndrome • Chronic psychophysiologic insomnia • Inadequate sleep hygiene • Restless legs syndrome • Difficulty staying asleep • Suggests advanced sleep phase syndrome • Major depression • Sleep apnea • Limb movement disorder • Aging 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  23. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  24. Obstructive sleep apnea • Absence of breathing during sleep • Obstruction of airways  snoring, decrease in oxygen saturation of hemoglobin, arousal1 • Result is disturbed sleep and EDS • Most common diagnosis of patients with complaint of EDS who seek care at US sleep centers2 • Almost 7 out of 10 patients 1. Victor LD. Am Fam Physician; 1999; 2. Punjabi NM, et al. Sleep; 2000.

  25. Obstructive sleepapnea • Associated with: • Not only CVD and obesity, but also: • Metabolic syndrome1 • Untreated OSA  Direct/deleterious effects on CV function and structure3 • Sympathetic activation • Oxidative stress • Inflammation • Endothelial dysfunction 1. Vgontzas AN, et al. Sleep Med Rev; 2005; 2. Shamsuzzaman AS, et al. JAMA; 2003; 3. Narkiewicz K, et al. Curr Cardiol Rep; 2005.

  26. Obstructive sleepapnea •  Systolic BP and heart rate1 •  CRP concentrations1 • May contribute to ischemia, CHF, arrhythmia, cerebrovascular disease, stroke •  Atrial fibrillation can predict OSA2 • 49% vs. 32% who do not have OSA • 1 in 15 has moderate to severe OSA3 • 1 in 5 has mild OSA 1. Meier-Ewert HK, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol; 2004; 2. Gami AS, et al. Circulation; 2004; 3. Shamsuzzaman AD, et al. JAMA; 2003.

  27. Physical examfor OSA • Check for: 1 • Obesity, especially at midriff & neck • Jaw and tongue abnormalities • Nasal obstruction; enlarged tonsils • Expiratory wheezing • Spinal curvature • Note signs of R ventricular failure • Edema, abdominal distention 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  28. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  29. Substance/medication use • EDS can be a sign of drug-dependent and drug-induced sleep disorders1 • Chronic use of stimulants • Hypnotics, sedatives • Antimetabolite therapy • OCs; thyroid medications • Withdrawal from CNS depressants 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  30. Substance/medication use • Review the patient’s Rx drug use • Check for interactions,high doses • Inquire about OTC medications • Diphenhydramine, anticholinergics • Take alcohol history • Interaction with Rx or OTCs? • Ask about recreational drug use 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  31. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  32. Shift-work disorder • Circadian rhythm sleep disorder1 • Internal/environmental sleep-wake cadence out of synch • Insomnia, EDS, or both1 • ~10% of the night and rotating shift work population2 • 4-fold  in sleepiness-related accidents, absenteeism, depression2 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Drake CL, et al. Sleep; 2004.

  33. Shift-work disorder • Resolves as body clock realigns1 • Fixed-shift work is preferable • Full-time night or evening • Rotating shifts should go clockwise • Day  Evening  Night • Helpful: Bright light, masks, white noise • Short t1/2 hypnotics, wake-promoting drugs used judiciously 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  34. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  35. Delayed-sleep phase syndrome • Sleep cycle out of synch with desired wake times1 • Problem: Going to sleep and awakening late (3AM and 10AM) • If earlier wake times are necessary, then EDS can result • Poor performance in work/school • Improved sleep hygiene is key 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  36. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  37. Narcolepsy • Pathologic sleepiness, sudden loss of muscle tone (cataplexy), fragmented sleep, sleep paralysis1 • Affects 1 out of 2,000 people2 • 140,000 Americans2 • Delay of 10 yr from onset to diagnosis is common1 • The cause is unknown 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Ohayon MM, et al. Neurology; 2002.

  38. Narcolepsy - Pathophysiology • Cause? –  hypocretin-secreting neurons1,2 • Regulate arousal state in hypothalamus • Marker – REM sleep during ≥2 daytime naps3 • Dysfunctionalswitching to REM sleep  wakefulness during sleep3 • Patients are mentally awake but physically in REM sleep – sleep paralysis syndrome. 1. Thannickal TC, et al. Neuron; 2000; 2. Sutcliffe JG & de Lecea. Nat Rev Neurosci; 2002; 3. Scammell T. Ann Neurol; 2003.

  39. Narcolepsy - Pathophysiology • Genetic predisposition1 • Familial clustering • 10- to 40-fold  vs. general population • Hallmark symptom – cataplexy • Bilateral weakness2 • Prevalence ~ 75%2 1. Nishino S, et al. Sleep Med Rev; 2000; 2. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  40. Narcolepsy – Diagnosis • Diagnostic for narcolepsy1 • History of cataplexy • Nocturnal polysomnography • MSLT • Differential diagnosis1 • Lesions of brain stem, hypothalamus • Encephalitis, metabolic disorders • Urine and blood exams can confirm non-narcoleptic EDS1 1.Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  41. Most frequent causes of EDS • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Obstructive sleep apnea • Substance/medication use • Shift-work sleep disorder • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Narcolepsy • Periodic limb movement disorders

  42. Periodic limb movement disorders • Abnormal twitching/kicking of legs during sleep1 • Interferes with nocturnal sleep  EDS • ~10% of adults2 • Restless legs syndrome • More common in middle/later years • Creeping/crawling sensations • Abnormalities in dopamine transmission2 1.Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Hornyak M, et al. Sleep Med Rev; 2006.

  43. Periodic limb movement disorders • Often occurs in narcolepsy and OSA1 • Seen in pregnancy, renal/hepatic failure, anemia and other disorders • Sleep history/partner’s testimony • Test: Iron, anemia, kidney/liver function • Dopamine agonists can be helpful 1.Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Hornyak M, et al. Sleep Med Rev; 2006.

  44. When to refer?

  45. Know when to treatand when to refer • Can condition be treated via sleep hygiene? • Insufficient sleep syndrome • Substance/medication use • Delayed sleep-phase syndrome • Shift-work sleep disorder • Counsel on sleep architecture • Do blood work, RFTs/LFTs • Prescribe sedatives prudently

  46. Know when to treatand when to refer • Refer when diagnosis appears to be: • Obstructive sleep apnea • Pulmonologist, sleep clinic, surgeon • Narcolepsy • Neurologist, sleep clinic • Periodic limb movement disorders • Internist, endocrinologist, sleep clinic

  47. The sleep clinic • Sleep studies evaluate EDS as well as OSA, narcolepsy, periodic limb movement disorders • Polysomnography1 • Data accumulated from patient as s/he sleeps • Quantifies sleep adequacy • Determines what causes EDS 1. AARC-APT. Respir Care; 1995.

  48. The sleep clinic - Polysomnography • Measures1: • EEG • Eye movements • Heart rate • O2 saturation • Muscle tone & activity • All-night test 1. AARC-APT. Respir Care; 1995; 2. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006.

  49. The sleep clinic – MSLT • Multiple Sleep Latency Test • Complimentary test for narcolepsy1 • Assesses speed of sleep onset • REM sleep is monitored • All-day test: 8-10 hours • High ESS scores ~ Low MSLT scores2 1. Beers MH, et al. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; 2006; 2. Chervin RD, et al. J Psychosom Res; 1997.

  50. Treatment

More Related