Sleep Disorders and Other Underlying Conditions

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
-SWS
Posts: 5301
Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 7:06 pm

Sleep Disorders and Other Underlying Conditions

Post by -SWS » Tue Apr 26, 2005 6:01 am

Interesting article on MSN Health & Fitness entitled Sleep Disorders Can Signal Other Troubles:
http://articles.health.msn.com/id/100098310/
Amanda Gardner, HealthDay Reporter on MSN Health & Fitness wrote:Study points to attention, psychiatric problems

MONDAY, Oct. 25 (HealthDayNews) -- Sometimes a sleep disorder can point to something more serious.

Researchers found the majority of a small sample of people suffering from obstructive sleep apnea or other sleep problems also had a high degree of attention-deficit problems, as well as neuromuscular and psychiatric conditions. The results were to be reported on Oct. 25 at the American College of Chest Physicians meeting in Seattle.

The message for doctors seems to be that they may need to look beyond a sleep disorder for underlying problems.

"It's not enough to say I treated your sleep apnea," said study author Dr. Clifford G. Risk, director of the Marlborough Center for Sleep Disorders in Massachusetts.

However, looking further can be tough in today's managed-care climate.

"Part of the difficulty is that clinicians are forced to see people for fewer amounts of time," explained Robert J. Resnick, past president of the American Psychological Association and author of The Hidden Disorder: A Clinician's Guide to Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in Adults. "You're supposed to see someone every five to seven minutes. There's no time to go into detail. You treat it symptomatically."

Sleep problems can be part and parcel of several different disorders, including bipolar disorder, anxiety, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

This study looked at 22 adult patients being evaluated for obstructive sleep apnea, a condition marked by episodes when a person stops breathing while asleep. The researchers assessed the degree of sleep apnea as well as the level of attention impairment.

More than half (55 percent) of the participants showed significant attention impairment at the beginning of the study, but improved substantially after receiving continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment. CPAP requires the individual to wear a facial mask that creates enough pressure to keep the airway open.

Another 18 percent of the participants, however, continued to have serious attention-deficit problems even after treatment. These individuals were diagnosed with adult attention-deficit disorder and required medication and skills training.

Additional testing showed that many of the patients also suffered from conditions as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, depression, and bipolar disorder.

"We looked at the spectrum of sleep disorders and asked: 'What is the impact of these several sleep disorders on ADHD and, furthermore, if you treat sleep disorders, does ADHD get better? And if it doesn't, why not?'" Risk said.

"The findings have importance for psychologists and psychiatrists because it says if you have a person with an attention-deficit impairment, you've got to do a history that includes the possibility of sleep apnea and the possibility of other sleep disorders," Risk said. "If you don't do that, you may miss the diagnosis."

User avatar
LDuyer
Posts: 1332
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 9:26 pm
Location: Maryland

Post by LDuyer » Tue Apr 26, 2005 10:29 am

Interesting article, and it makes me look suspiciously at the ol' noggin' of mine ....... could I have some of those things?

Those are specific mental disorders, different from depression, I suppose. Depression however is a slippery subject. It's the chicken and egg story of which came first, or rather, which caused which.

Well, I don't have attention-deficit disorder.
But I do have the procrastination-from-hell disorder.
Will that do?
Is there a cure for that?


Linda,
who suffers from this PFH disorder big time!

tlingit35
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Apr 26, 2005 12:20 pm
Location: Ketchikan, Alaska

Apnea, Adult ADD, Dyslexia

Post by tlingit35 » Tue Apr 26, 2005 12:29 pm

I was researching Dyslexia because I have it and wanted to learn more, and I thought I had Adult ADD but found out that Dyslexia and symptoms of ADD can be one and the same so I wanted to know if there was a correlation between Dyslexia and Apnea and found this article. The difference between Dyslexia ADD and Adult ADD seems to be that Dyslexia can concentrate where Adult ADD can't. Does anyone know if any of the test patients have Dyslexia and if so were they the ones that CPAP helped with the ADD or if they were the one's that it didn't help.
Misti Adams

User avatar
rested gal
Posts: 12881
Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 10:14 pm
Location: Tennessee

Post by rested gal » Tue Apr 26, 2005 1:06 pm

Very interesting, SWS.

As awareness spreads, I hope doctors in general will also start turning the title of that article around and think of it this way, too:

Other Troubles Can Signal Sleep Disorders

Either way - more doctors need to start looking at their patients with the possibility of OSA uppermost in their clinician minds. If there are any symptoms of possible OSA at all, the doctors need to start a screening for OSA immediately -- even if it's as basic and simple a first step as an overnight recording pulse oximetry test at home.