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[News] Apnea article in the NYT
#1
Apnea article in the NYT
Here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/27/well/...e=Homepage

I’d give the piece a B- but I do hope it raises general awareness. I provided a reader’s comment plugging this forum and Oscar.
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#2
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
Seems like a well-written article to me. The only thing I would question is the claim that sleep apnea is on the rise because obesity is on the rise. I agree that that is most likely true, but I don't think it's the whole story. I think that the fact that we now have CPAP machines to treat the affliction is what's responsible for more awareness of the affliction. Not too long ago CPAP machines didn't exist, so if someone had sleep apnea the only option was a tracheotomy, something that comes with so many of its own problems that it wouldn't be done unless the affliction was very severe.

Another point perhaps worth making is that sleep apnea can be a cause of obesity, or if not the cause, at least a contributing factor. When we're sleep-deprived we need the extra energy we get from food, so we tend to eat more. The more food we eat, the worse our apnea gets, which makes us eat even more. A truly vicious cycle!

I saw your comment, Dormeo. Well done!
Sleepster

INFORMATION ON APNEA BOARD FORUMS OR ON APNEABOARD.COM SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS MEDICAL ADVICE. ALWAYS SEEK THE ADVICE OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE SEEKING TREATMENT FOR MEDICAL CONDITIONS, INCLUDING SLEEP APNEA. INFORMATION POSTED ON THE APNEA BOARD WEB SITE AND FORUMS ARE PERSONAL OPINION ONLY AND NOT NECESSARILY A STATEMENT OF FACT.
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#3
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
Meh nothing we didnt already know
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#4
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
(05-27-2019, 09:12 PM)Sleepster Wrote: Another point perhaps worth making is that sleep apnea can be a cause of obesity, or if not the cause, at least a contributing factor. When we're sleep-deprived we need the extra energy we get from food, so we tend to eat more. The more food we eat, the worse our apnea gets, which makes us eat even more. A truly vicious cycle!

Emphasis on **sleep apnea can be a cause of obesity**
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#5
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
I gave it a B- mainly because it could so easily leave the reader with the impression that non-obese people rarely have apnea unless their airways are structurally abnormal. I was also sorry there was no mention of central apnea, and I thought the non-cpap options seemed to be treated a little too respectfully. Still, I hope it raises general awareness!
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#6
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
(05-27-2019, 09:15 PM)Diotima245 Wrote: Meh  nothing we didnt already know

Nothing we didn't know, but something a lot of people don't know. It helps raise awareness, which is a good thing.  I thought the article was reasonably balanced and gave a reasonably sound overview of the subject. It's not a technical paper, it's something for the mass market and hnce can't go into too many details.

Thanks to the OP for posting it. The full text follows.


New York Times  2019-05-27
PERSONAL HEALTH
Sleep Apnea Can Have Deadly Consequences


The condition is on the rise because the most frequent cause is obesity, which continues its unrelenting climb among American adults.
Although the woman in her 50s had been effectively treated for depression, she remained plagued by symptoms that often accompany it: fatigue, sleepiness and lethargy, even though she thought she was getting enough sleep.

With depression no longer causing her persistent symptoms, her psychiatrist advised her to consult a sleep specialist.
Sure enough, a night in the sleep lab at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine revealed that while the woman was supposedly asleep, she experienced micro-awakenings about 18 times an hour, resulting in sleep that restored neither body nor brain. All night long, she would stop breathing for more than 10 seconds at a time, followed by a mini-arousal and a snore as she gasped for breath to raise the depleted oxygen level in her blood.
Diagnosis: Obstructive sleep apnea, an increasingly common yet often missed or untreated condition that can result in poor quality of life, a risk of developing heart disease, stroke, diabetes and even cancer, and perhaps most important of all, a threefold increased risk of often-fatal motor vehicle accidents.
Obstructive sleep apnea afflicts about 9 percent of women and 24 percent of men, most of them middle-aged or older, yet as many as 9 in 10 adults with this treatable condition remain undiagnosed, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

The condition is on the rise because the most frequent cause is obesity, which continues its unrelenting climb among American adults. Sleep apnea afflicts more than two people in five who have a body mass index of more than 30, and three in five adults with metabolic syndrome, Dr. Sigrid C. Veasey and Dr. Ilene M. Rosen wrote in The New England Journal of Medicine in April.

Although sleep apnea occasionally affects slender folks who may, for example, have a small jaw or large tongue, in overweight people, excess fatty tissue in the tongue and throat can block the airway when throat muscles relax during sleep. This is most likely to happen when people sleep on their backs.

Weight loss helps but may not always correct the problem. Dr. Rosen told me of a man in his 40s who had been treated for congestive heart failure and lost 40 pounds. Still, he remained tired all the time, and his wife said he snored so loudly she had to wear earplugs at night. Then she read about sleep apnea in a magazine and insisted he visit the sleep lab, where an overnight study showed his breathing was disrupted 45 times an hour, causing his blood’s oxygen level at night to drop to 65 percent of normal.
This man’s story prompted me to ask Dr. Veasey, “What about those of us without a bed partner? How might we know if we have obstructive sleep apnea?”
She replied, “There’s a constellation of symptoms, starting with unrestorative sleep no matter how long you sleep. Even if you try to sleep more on weekends, you still wake up feeling unrefreshed. The fractured sleep results in feeling like you’ve stayed up all night.”

Then she added a list of other clues. Perhaps most telling: You are sleepy during the day, especially when you’re sedentary. Take notice if you fall asleep within 10 minutes at a movie, play or concert or when watching TV. You get up four or more times a night to urinate (men, it may not be your prostate!). You wake up in the morning with a very dry mouth or a headache. You’re moody, irritable and have difficulty concentrating. Your reaction time and speed at performing tasks slows as if you are five years older than you really are.

Those who experience even a few of such symptoms would be wise to bring them to their doctors’ attention, Dr. Veasey said.

And if you’d rather not base your suspicions on symptoms alone, you might invite a close friend to share a room with you for a night or two and ask in the morning if the friend heard or was awakened by your snoring and noticed whether your noisy inspiration of air followed a seemingly prolonged stoppage of breathing. The snoring doesn’t have to be loud to be a symptom of sleep apnea, but it’s likely to be irregular and interspersed with quiet pauses.

A proper diagnosis can be a problem for the millions of Americans who lack easy access to a sleep lab, often located at major medical centers, or don’t have insurance coverage for a needed sleep study.

There is also the option of a home-based test, which costs a third to a half less than a sleep lab study. It uses a device without electrodes that records breathing efforts, airflow and blood oxygen levels during sleep.

Sleep apnea can be effectively treated with a nighttime device called CPAP, for continuous positive airway pressure, a machine that provides constant positive pressure when the sleeper breathes in and out. It uses a mask that must be properly applied to form a tight seal around the nose and mouth.
[Read more: A Guide to Sleep Apnea]

Unfortunately, many who could benefit from CPAP fail to use it consistently, if at all. Many find the device cumbersome. Yet, about one-third of consistent users say it has completely transformed their lives and are now unwilling to go anywhere without it because they feel so much better with it, Dr. Veasey said. One of her patients even bought a generator so he could use it on his vacation in the Amazon.

Dr. Rosen’s patient also got a CPAP machine, which improved not only his own life but also his wife’s, who was now able to get a full night’s sleep uninterrupted by raucous snores.

Another treatment option is a hypoglossal nerve stimulator that is surgically implanted to move the tongue forward and keep the airway open during sleep. Although it doesn’t fully reverse the apnea, Dr. Veasey said it improves the condition enough for patients to feel a lot better. However, insurance coverage can be a problem for some people.

Other options include a splint placed in the mouth to push the lower jaw forward, and the use of obstacles, like tennis balls inserted into the backs of pajamas, to discourage patients from sleeping on their backs.

For those who need it, weight loss is important even if a device like CPAP is used. More than half of overweight people with mild sleep apnea get better with a loss of only 22 pounds, the doctors wrote. But they warned against using substances like alcohol, benzodiazepines and opioids that can make apnea even worse.

Jane Brody is the Personal Health columnist, a position she has held since 1976. She has written more than a dozen books including the best sellers “Jane Brody’s Nutrition Book” and “Jane Brody’s Good Food Book.”
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#7
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
"Another point perhaps worth making is that sleep apnea can be a cause of obesity, or if not the cause, at least a contributing factor. When we're sleep-deprived we need the extra energy we get from food, so we tend to eat more. The more food we eat, the worse our apnea gets, which makes us eat even more. A truly vicious cycle!" - Sleepster

yes, and I'd add: when we're sleep deprived we're exhausted, struggling to get through each day, lacking in vitality, energy and clarity of mind. in other words another factor in weight gain for apneacs is fatigue induced tendency toward inactivity.
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#8
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
Thanks for bringing out the article and very good comments there. I do think the old school linking of obesity and sleep apnea is becoming debunked as more info shows skinny people get SA too. FWIW I didn't "skinny" my way out of apnea by losing 105 lbs.

Coffee
INFORMATION ON APNEA BOARD FORUMS OR ON APNEABOARD.COM SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED MEDICAL ADVICE. ALWAYS SEEK THE ADVICE OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE SEEKING TREATMENT FOR MEDICAL CONDITIONS, INCLUDING SLEEP APNEA. INFORMATION POSTED ON THE APNEA BOARD WEBSITE AND FORUMS ARE PERSONAL OPINION ONLY AND NOT NECESSARILY A STATEMENT OF FACT.
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#9
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
Sleep apnea runs in my family since generations, but before it was called sleep apnea, it was a demon coming in the night chocking you. Because that old woman from 40 years ago put a curse on the whole family.
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#10
RE: Apnea article in the NYT
It is hereditary and how our neck/throat physiologically is made. My father suffered(he was obese) and the entire family suffered too with his loud roof raising snores. However my sibling and I are both not obese being slim but yet suffer. I suspect other members of my family do too but are in denial.
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INFORMATION ON APNEA BOARD FORUMS OR ON APNEABOARD.COM SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS MEDICAL ADVICE. ALWAYS SEEK THE ADVICE OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE SEEKING TREATMENT FOR MEDICAL CONDITIONS, INCLUDING SLEEP APNEA. INFORMATION POSTED ON THE APNEA BOARD WEB SITE AND FORUMS ARE PERSONAL OPINION ONLY AND NOT NECESSARILY A STATEMENT OF FACT.
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