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Sleep Apnea - 7 Tips To Help You Sleep
Do you keep your partner awake at night with your snoring? Are you often tired during the day? Do you sometimes find yourself suffering from morning headaches, being a bit forgetful, unable to concentrate and irritable? If so, you may...more info on Sleep Apnea

Symptoms Of Sleep Apnea
It is often hard to differentiate between snoring and a serious medical condition known as sleep apnea. However, there are definitive symptoms of sleep apnea if you know what to look for. Snoring, for instance, is a distracting...more info on Sleep Apnea

Understanding Sleep Apnea
Sleep disorders are part of a broad category encompassing of variety of conditions that affect sleep. Some sleep disorders, like insomnia, prevent sleep from occurring at all. Sleep apnea is different. Instead of keeping you awake,...more info on Sleep Apnea

Using Common Sense Methods to Help Relieve Sleep Apnea Symptoms
Common sense methods come in handy when it comes to relieving sleep apnea symptoms. It is important to always sleep using a pillow under your head for elevation purposes. Buy regular sized pillows as opposed to oversized pillows....more info on Sleep Apnea


Key Aspects of Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea The Facts About This Important Sleep Disorder

Effective Snoring Sleep Apnea Treatments

Diagnosing Sleep Apnea

Alternative Health Therapies that Can Help Sleep Apnea Patients

Sleep Apnea (also called Sleep Apnoea) is a common sleep disorder that is characterized by brief interruptions of breathing during sleep, which force the sufferer to wake up to resume normal breathing, and disrupt and disturb their normal sleep cycle. These episodes, called apneas, usually last from a few seconds up to as long as sixty seconds in severe cases, and may occur repeatedly throughout the night.

sleep apnea sleep disorder

Sleep Apnea Described in Layman's Terms

Sleep apnea (also sometimes spelled sleep apnoea) comes about when a sufferer's breathing discontinues as they sleep. It is defined as "a common sleep disorder characterized by brief interruptions of breathing during sleep." These breaks of sleep are "apneas", and they generally take place over a period of ten seconds or more and can occur quite a few times throughout the course of a night. Persons who suffer with this sleep disorder often awake produced by their struggle to get their breath but commonly do not remember how they suffered during the night.

Researchers who study sleep and sleep disorders break sleep problems down into three different categories, which include obstructive sleep apnea, central sleep apnea (CSA) and mixed sleep apnea. Obstructive sleep apnea (abbreviated to OSA) is by far the more commonly observed form. In this case the soft tissue found in the back part of the throat relaxes too much and it interrupts the normal flow of air. Despite the effort to breathe, when an individual afflicted with sleep apnea sleeps, it is not possible for the airflow to pass from the nose and mouth into the lungs freely. The natural process of obstructive sleep apnea causes the blood to have a decreased level of oxygen in it. Regular breathing starts out by way of a small degree of choking or a snorting sensation. Central sleep apnea (CSA) is not very common. It occurs when the brain undergoes troubles in sending out signals to the body in terms of regular breathing patterns. The third form of of sleep apnea known as mixed sleep apnea is just that, it is a combination of the other two but has more in common with OSA and its treatment follows much the same course.

Victims who have interrupted sleep patterns are quite often very exhausted during the day. In fact "excessive daytime sleepiness" is one of the major symptoms of sleep apnea. Patients who suffer from sleep apnea don't get any rest over night due to the drop-off in blood oxygenation levels, the interruptions in breathing and/or the scramble for the airways to move air into and out of the lungs, and finally, an individual will fall into a deep soundless sleep but then suddenly be jolted out of it and into a lighter sleep. When this happens too many times throughout the course of a night, it induces problems.

Persons who have a tendency towards sleep apnea often are loud snorers also. But that does not inevitably mean that the same persons also suffer from sleep apnea, and vice versa. Not everyone who has sleep apnea recognizes that they also do indeed snore. Most people who suffer from sleep apnea are not aware that they have pauses in their breathing at night. Typically it takes a spouse or another family member to become aware of the fact that an individual suffers from a form of sleep apnea. Sleep apnea is more common in patients who have excessive weight on their bodies although even those without weight problems can develop sleep apnea.

If left untreated, Sleep Apnea can be life threatening. Excessive Daytime Sleepiness (EDS) can cause people to fall asleep at inappropriate times, such as while driving, endangering their lives and the lives of their passengers and those around them.

Sleep apnea also appears to put individuals at risk for stroke and Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs), also known as "mini-strokes", and is associated with coronary heart disease, heart failure, irregular heartbeat, heart attack, gout and high blood pressure.

So, if you or a loved one are suffering from sleep apnea, be sure to see your doctor so that the sleep apnea symptoms can be treated, removed, or reduced before they become life threatening.

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New Sleep Disorder Information

Diagnosing Sleep Apnea
If you have noticed a pattern of heavy snoring, shortness of breath or a choking sensation during the night, then you may have sleep apnea. Most people thing that snoring is just snoring, but it can actually be a warning sign of...more info on Sleep Apnea

Sleeping Disorders in the News

02/07/2012
Merck Has Positive Results With New Insomnia Drug
Merck has announced positive results in a phase 3 trial of its insomnia drug. It's a key player in the companies up and coming products, especially considering the loss of patent protection on its top drugs for asthma and allergys...

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02/04/2012
In Preadolescence, Sleep Deprivation Tied To Increased Nighttime Urination
Nighttime visits to the bathroom are generally associated with being pregnant or having an enlarged prostate, but the problem can affect youngsters, too. A new study sheds light on why some children may need to urinate more often during the rest cycle...

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02/03/2012
Link Between Sleep Apnea And Silent Strokes, Small Lesions In Brain
People with severe sleep apnea may have an increased risk of silent strokes and small lesions in the brain, according to a small study presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2012. "We found a surprisingly high frequency of sleep apnea in patients with stroke that underlines its clinical relevance as a stroke risk factor," said Jessica Kepplinger, M.D...

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01/30/2012
New Genetic Study Links Body Clock Receptor To Diabetes
A study published in Nature Genetics has found new evidence for a link between the body clock hormone melatonin and type 2 diabetes. The study found that people who carry rare genetic mutations in the receptor for melatonin have a much higher risk of type 2 diabetes...

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01/23/2012
Insomnia - Early Diagnosis Plus Treatment Helps Prevent Complications
Even though insomnia is the most common sleep disorder, it is often left unrecognized and untreated, despite advances in diagnosis and management. The risk of developing other illnesses, such as diabetes, depression, hypertension, and possibly even death in older adults increases if insomnia is left untreated...

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