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Sleep apnea is a common disorder

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plommer

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Sleep apnea is a common disorder in which you have one or more pauses in breathing or shallow breaths while you sleep.

Breathing pauses can last from a few seconds to minutes. They often occur 5 to 30 times or more an hour. Typically, normal breathing then starts again, sometimes with a loud snort or choking sound.

Sleep apnea usually is a chronic (ongoing) condition that disrupts your sleep 3 or more nights each week. You often move out of deep sleep and into light sleep when your breathing pauses or becomes shallow.

This results in poor sleep quality that makes you tired during the day. Sleep apnea is one of the leading causes of excessive daytime sleepiness.
Overview

Sleep apnea often goes undiagnosed. Doctors usually can't detect the condition during routine office visits. Also, there are no blood tests for the condition.

Most people who have sleep apnea don't know they have it because it only occurs during sleep. A family member and/or bed partner may first notice the signs of sleep apnea.

The most common type of sleep apnea is obstructive sleep apnea. This most often means that the airway has collapsed or is blocked during sleep. The blockage may cause shallow breathing or breathing pauses.

When you try to breathe, any air that squeezes past the blockage can cause loud snoring. Obstructive sleep apnea happens more often in people who are overweight, but it can affect anyone.

The animation below shows how obstructive sleep apnea occurs. Click the "start" button to play the animation. Written and spoken explanations are provided with each frame. Use the buttons in the lower right corner to pause, restart, or replay the animation, or use the scroll bar below the buttons to move through the frames.
 
I have sleep apnea, and I'm sure many other posters here have this infection as well.


Thank goodness for this contraption. It saved my life.
GKH20Humidifier.jpg
 
Must be a drag. Sleep has never been something I found easy. Glad I don't have to deal with that.

Mudcat I'm in love with my CPAP machine, really.

It allows me to get hours of uninterrupted sleep. I used to dread going to bed, now I look forward to it. i've been on my machine since July 2009.
 
I don't even get the concept. Does that clear part go over your mouth and nose or something?

The picture shows just the machine. You connect a hose and nasal mask and it forces air into you at a high pressure to prevent the airway from collapsing.

It is impossible to snore with one of these things on.
OptiLifeRespironicsCPAPMask-main_Full.jpg
 
I got diagnosed with sleep apnea 2 weeks ago.

I have mild sleep apnea if I'm on my side or on my stomach and severe sleep apnea if I'm on my back (I wake up 80 times an hour. Lolbbq).

So I went back 4 nights ago for another overnight @ the sleep study place. Slept like a champ with just this contraption that covers my nostrils (like patients have when they're in the hospital).

Waiting for a call back from Dr's office to discuss my options for a machine. I have good health coverage so I'm not too concerned.


Actually feels good to know why Ive felt dead tired for 2 years. Sleep tech says apnea chips away at you until it finally catches up to you.
 
The CPAP I got fitted for does not have the chin strap like the picture plommer posted. Not bothersome at all after the first 10 minutes. Machine was real quiet too.

I can't wait till I get my machine. I'm in the 15% of people who are not overweight that have sleep apnea. Something about my jaw or something
 
A bunch of friends shared a hotel for Comic Con last year. One guy had sleep apena and a cpap. It fell off in the middle of the night. I thought there was an earthquake or a plane landing he was snoring so loud.

My sister has it too, but she's overweight. She says the machine takes getting used to but is pretty great.
 
do they machines make a lot of noise or somthing?

I have some friends that live in an apartment above a guy they just call "sleep apnea guy"

they said that his machine sounds like someone playing tennis against the wall below them?