Differentials

Obstructive sleep apnea

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Significant snoring, higher BMI, less sleep-maintenance insomnia, crowded oropharynx, and a short and thick neck are suggestive of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) but can also be seen in CSA.

OSA and CSA can and often do coexist.[40]

INVESTIGATIONS

Polysomnography shows apneas accompanied by significant and paradoxical abdominal and chest wall movements not seen in central apneas.[1][36] In patients classified as New York Heart Association class II through IV, with heart failure and suspicion of sleep-disordered breathing or excessive daytime sleepiness, a formal sleep assessment is needed to distinguish OSA from CSA.[7][22]​​

Sleep-related hypoventilation/hypoxemic syndromes

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Occurs in obesity-hypoventilation, in patients with a ventilatory control problem, or in patients with a neurologic muscular disorder who cannot ventilate appropriately.[36][40]

INVESTIGATIONS

ABGs show hypercapnia in sleep-related hypoventilation/hypoxemic syndromes, unlike CSA where most patients have hypocapnia or eucapnia.[1]

Results from chronic hypoventilation and waking hypercapnia.[36][40]

Depression

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Early morning awakening.

Overt sleepiness is quite uncommon, and observed breathing patterns (in patients without concurrent sleep-disordered breathing diagnosis) are normal.

Morning headaches are unusual.

Other symptoms of depression should be present, such as dysphoria, anhedonia, and altered appetite.

INVESTIGATIONS

Patients with depression most often have abnormal results on standardized depression scales, such as the Beck Depression Inventory or the Patient Health Questionnaire-9.

Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea due to congestive heart failure

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Orthopnea often accompanies poorly controlled congestive heart failure (CHF) with paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.

INVESTIGATIONS

Medical management of CHF should be optimized. If symptoms remain, polysomnography may be necessary to determine the cause.

Restless legs syndrome

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

A characteristic history of restless legs syndrome (RLS) may be obtained, including an unpleasant sensation in the legs, which almost demands movement (often difficult to describe, but occasionally described as creepy-crawly, cramping, or fidgety sensations); worse in the evening, worse during immobility, and transiently improved by movement of the affected limbs.

INVESTIGATIONS

RLS is diagnosed by a careful history.

Polysomnogram-associated features may include periodic limb movements, but polysomnography is not necessary to make the diagnosis in adults.

Insomnia due to medication effects

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Temporal relationship between onset of symptoms and initiation or increase in dose of candidate medications.

INVESTIGATIONS

Most helpful is a careful review of medications and their adverse-effect profile.

If a medication is strongly suspected, improvement in the symptom upon removal of the medication supports this diagnosis. However, this may not always be possible.

Hypersomnia due to inadequate sleep

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

The sleep history will reveal marked restriction of sleep, such that even patients who are excellent sleepers experience chronic sleep deprivation.

INVESTIGATIONS

A careful sleep history is often adequate.

In more perplexing cases, a sleep diary kept by a spouse or caregiver, or even actigraphy, which continuously measures gross motor activity, may be required to obtain an accurate assessment of sleep time and pattern.

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