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New Study Reveals Sleep Apnea Health Risk

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By Rachel Stockton (rachels@foodconsumer.org)

According to a sleep study out of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, people who have severe sleep apnea are 43% more likely to die at an early age than their sound-sleeping counterparts.

Sleep apnea is a physical condition caused by the airways collapsing; the result is an interruption in breathing that lasts for at least 10 seconds. Sleep apnea is considered severe when it occurs every two to three minutes.

Sleep apnea patients are at risk for a number of life threatening health problems, such as high blood pressure, heart failure and stroke.

For the study, 6400 people were surveyed over a period of 8 years; the study was funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, which estimates that 12 million adults suffer from the malady.

Experts agree that the best way to treat sleep apnea, which causes low blood oxygen levels and fragmented sleep, is to lose weight.  In fact, the National Sleep Institute maintains that weight loss is the ONLY way to treat apnea.  Anything else just treats the symptoms.

The most successful treatment for the snoring that accompanies apnea is the CPAP (continuous supportive airway pressure), which keeps the airways from collapsing, allowing for more restful sleep.  According to the National Sleep Institute, the vast majority of CPAP users successfully keep sleep apnea under control, citing increased energy and mental focus.

The Institute also has some practical suggestions on its website for those who choose not to use a CPAP:

1.        Lose weight

2.       Avoid alcohol, especially right before bed

3.       Quit smoking

4.       Sleep on your side; most sleep apnea patients contend that their symptoms aren't as severe when they lie on their sides, as opposed to lying flat on their backs.

The good news is that most insurance companies now pay for treatment at a sleep center, as well as for the CPAP itself.  This is further proof that sleep apnea is a serious medical condition requiring intervention.

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (4 posted):

Chad on 08/19/2009 16:46:58
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I have sleep apnea and have been reading info from ebooks that has been helpful. This is new stuff as well. I have been getting different ebooks from http://www.showmemyebooks.com and it's helped me understand things.
-C
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Sleep Guide on 08/19/2009 18:44:38
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I think weight loss is not the ONLY way to treat apnea. Obstructive sleep apnea can be treated through weight loss if the main cause is obesity. Some symptoms are:

-body mass index of over 25 to 29 (overweight) and even greater than 30 (obese)
-men with large neck size: 17 inches or more
-women with large neck size: 16 inches or more.

But there are people with sleep apnea who are thin, not overweight. Or they may have abnormalities of the soft tissue structure of the head and neck. They can't be treated with weight loss.

For those with abnormal structure, such as large adenoids and tonsils, they can be treated with surgery. Tonsillectomy, UPPP, Somnoplasty or Laser are some common types of surgery.
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steve on 08/19/2009 19:57:11
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There really is a better way to deal with sleep apnea than CPAP or surgery. I spent 4 years studying sleep apnea and I believe that the root cause is due to the attenuation of the signal from the brain to the diaphragm muscles when the sleeper enters stage II sleep. This un-intended side-effect of the "reduction of muscle tonus" that occurs during this transition causes breathing to stop. Then, when the CO2 level gets too high, the sleeper makes a rapid inhalation DRAGGING the soft tissue into the airway, obstructing it and waking them up. The reduction of the signal from the brain is causing the problem.
So... I found this herbal combination product that INCREASES the signal and keeps the breathing going. This addresses the root cause. The stuff is called Sleep Apnea Relief and I buy it from Nature's Rite. I've been using it for 4 years
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DanWalter on 08/20/2009 16:26:28
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I wouldn't trust anything coming out of Johns Hopkins: http://adventuresincardiology.com/
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