People with untreated and undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea have a markedly increased risk of severe motor vehicle crashes involving personal injury, according to a study presented at the 2007 American Thoracic Society International Conference.
Many individuals have contacted Awake In America since Monday, July 9, 2007, when TV talk show host Nancy Grace said sleep apnea and its risks are, in her words, complete B.S.
More than 600 people have contacted Awake In America’s offices using a variety of means, including IM, email, and phone, wanting to know if there is a way to let CNN know of their disillusionment over Nancy Grace’s comments. Responding to the communications, Awake In America has compiled a pre-written leter to which you are encouraged to add your own thoughts, as well as a variety of ways for you to take the matter directly to CNN, as well as its parent company, Time–Warner.
On July 9, 2007 Nancy Grace, the former prosecutor-turned-talk-show-host, made a large error that has cause an uproar in the patient sector of the sleep community. The professional sector, primarily sleep physicians and many sleep-related organizations, have remained silent.
Grace’s show was about the 2006 death of former World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) wrestler Mike Durham, saying, in her words, that sleep apnea is basically snoring, and you know, not breathing for a few seconds periodically through the night. You don`t die of sleep apnea. That is complete BS.
A paper published in the June 1, 2007 issue of the journal Sleep is the first literature review and formal classification of a wide range of documented sleep-related disorders associated with abnormal sexual behaviors and experiences.
Heart failure patients with untreated obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are more likely to die than those without this sleep disorder, says a study published in a professional cardiology journal.
The study followed 164 patients with heart failure for more than seven years and those with OSA were found to have had double the death rate of patients who did not have sleep apnea. Of the 37 patients with untreated OSA, the death rate was 24 percent in contrast to 12 percent for the 113 patients with no sleep apnea.
A study recently published demonstrates that individuals diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) may have hope of regaining cognitive functions once they begin treatment for the apnea.
Study results, published in the December 2006 issue of CHEST, show the majority of trial participants who suffered memory-impairment prior to treatment demonstrated normal memory performance after three months of optimal continuous positive airway pressure CPAP use.
A CPAP is a medical device, which, in the simplest of terms, is an air generator set to deliver a prescribed, constant flow of air, keeping the airway open and preventing apnea.
On an average day, the human mouth will normally produce two to four pints of saliva — enough to fill a half gallon carton of milk. While most people don’t often think about saliva, it plays a role in almost everything that happens in the mouth. It protects, lubricates, and buffers the mouth, and saliva helps people with speaking functions, digesting food, and flowing bacteria away from teeth to keep the mouth clean.
But for millions of people, including many CPAP and BiPAP users, it may feel like their mouths produce almost no moisture at all, possibly hindering these functions. These individuals may suffer from a health condition known as dry mouth, or xerostomia, a feeling of inadequate saliva or dryness in the mouth. Now, Oasis Moisturizing Mouthwash and Mouth Spray, from the makers of Sensodyne, offers solutions for those who suffer from dry mouth.
Prescription sleep aids may do little to improve the use of continuous positive airway pressure devices (CPAP) among patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA).
A new study published in the November issue of CHEST, the peer-reviewed journal of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP), finds that patients with OSA who were given prescription sleep aids were no more likely to use their CPAP machines than patients with obstructive sleep apnea taking a placebo.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) affects up to 20 percent of men in western cultures, five percent of whom experience significant physical symptoms.
A study published in September 2006 issue of the Journal of Forensic Sciences finds that sex offenders who suffer from obstructive sleep apnea experience more harmful psychological symptoms than do sex offenders with normal sleep patterns.
How to contact CNN about Nancy Grace’s saying apnea risks are ‘complete BS’
Monday, July 9, 2007 at 1:17 pm · 0 comments
by Dave J. (Scoop0901)
in Sleep Apnea, Top News
Many individuals have contacted Awake In America since Monday, July 9, 2007, when TV talk show host Nancy Grace said sleep apnea and its risks are, in her words, complete B.S.
More than 600 people have contacted Awake In America’s offices using a variety of means, including IM, email, and phone, wanting to know if there is a way to let CNN know of their disillusionment over Nancy Grace’s comments. Responding to the communications, Awake In America has compiled a pre-written leter to which you are encouraged to add your own thoughts, as well as a variety of ways for you to take the matter directly to CNN, as well as its parent company, Time–Warner.
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