SDB & PLMS: What Does It Mean?


© Kerrin Leon White

SDB, PLMS, UARS, OSA, CPAP, AHI . . .

Are you confused by all the acronyms used by sleep researchers and even ordinary people who are "into" sleep disorders?

I hope so; I hope your curiosity to understand this combination of acronyms works to get you reading about a subject which, if I spelled the words out, would sound unbelievably boring, but which really has relevance to many people with SDB (Sleep Disordered Breathing, which includes Sleep Apnea and the closely related disease called Upper Airway Resistance Syndrome or UARS--another acronym for you to learn! PLMS, in case you didn't know already, stands for Periodic Limb Movements of Sleep.

At the risk of losing you for good, I will go on to mention the recently published research report that stimulated me to write this article. It is entitled "The Association of Upper Airway Resistance with Periodic Limb Movements," and was authored by two researchers at the University of Mississippi Medical Center: Elliott N. Exar, MS, and Nancy A, Collop, MD. I found it in my latest issue of the journal Sleep (Volume 24, Number 2, pages 188-192, March 15, 2001).

In case your curiosity continues to overcome your confusion, let me jump ahead. For quite a while, sleep doctors have noticed that people with sleep apnea controlled on CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) sometimes developed PLMS, which can disrupt sleep in a way similar to apneas and hypopneas. This study claims to be the first to show an association between PLMS and UARS, which can be roughly thought of as a kind of minor, maybe fledgling, form of sleep apnea. UARS involves no stoppage, or even reduction, of breathing, but it does involve enough obstruction to require extra effort to continue breathing, and that effort can disrupt the continuity of sleep much as do apneas and hypopneas--and PLMS.

So what? Remember that PLMS often appears only after sleep apnea is controlled by CPAP. The apneas and hypopneas somehow appear to "cover up" the PLMS--or is that the wrong way of thinking about this development?

UARS, being less severe than sleep apnea, might not "cover up" an association between SDB and PLMS.

The researchers studied 20 patients with PLMS who underwent overnight laboratory sleep studies. They eliminated most people with diagnosable sleep apnea by excluding patients who turned out to have an Apnea/Hypopnea Index (AHI) above 10.

Nevertheless, 14 (70%) of these 20 PLMS patients showed evidence of UARS. The majority (63%) of arousals related to difficulty breathing

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

3.   Oct 18, 2004 5:22 PM
In response to UARS posted by BobandCarol:
and to Thanks -- But -- posted by < ...

-- posted by Sir_Bulldog


2.   Oct 18, 2004 8:03 AM
Thanks for the information on these sleep disorders. However, you left me wanting more information. This seemed to be a teaser with more to follow. If so, when will the followup arrive?

p.s. Th ...


-- posted by humorous_sage


1.   Oct 27, 2001 1:39 PM
My husband has been diagnosed with UARS after having symptoms since 1989, being diagnosed with PLMD and an Apnea of 7.7 in 1994 and no success with keeping the CPAP on. We moderate a support group for ...

-- posted by BobandCarol





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