CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
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roster
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CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by roster » Mon Dec 15, 2008 8:03 pm

CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes Patients With Obstructive Sleep Apnea
ScienceDaily (Dec. 15, 2008) — A new study suggests that screening type 2 diabetes patients for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and treating those who have OSA with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy could improve the management of their hyperglycemia and might favorably influence their long-term prognosis.


Results show that in a group of 20 type 2 diabetics who were mostly obese and were newly diagnosed with OSA, sleeping and nocturnal hyperglycemia were reduced and the sleeping interstitial glucose level was less variable during CPAP treatment. The average glucose level during sleep decreased by approximately 20 mg/dl after an average of 41 days of CPAP. The sleeping glucose also was more stable after treatment, with the median standard deviation decreasing from 20.0 to 13.0 and the mean difference between maximum and minimum values decreasing from 88 to 57.

According to Arthur Dawson, MD, senior consultant in the Division of Chest and Critical Care Medicine and co-director of research at Scripps Clinic Sleep Center in La Jolla, Calif., it is not surprising that many diabetics have sleep apnea since type 2 diabetes and OSA are both conditions that are becoming much more common because of the obesity epidemic.

Dawson said, "The low blood oxygen level and the arousals associated with an apneic event activate the sympathetic nervous system and cause the release of stress hormones, both of which tend to raise the blood glucose. If we could prevent these apneic events with CPAP then we might keep the glucose level lower and more stable through the night."

According to the authors, population surveys, the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort and the Sleep Heart Health Study estimate the prevalence of type 2 diabetes in patients with OSA to be about 15 percent. OSA is associated with increased insulin resistance independent of obesity; 50 percent of patients with OSA have type 2 diabetes or impaired carbohydrate metabolism.

Twenty patients with type 2 diabetes who were on a stable diabetic regime were recruited at the time of their initial consultation with a sleep physician. All participants were newly diagnosed with moderate to severe OSA, and none had any previous experience with CPAP. Glucose level was monitored with a continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) over a period of 36 hours, which included a night in a sleep laboratory for evaluation by polysmnography. On the first night of the study, patients' OSA was untreated. A second night of glucose monitoring and sleep recording was done after the participants had been on CPAP therapy for a duration of one-to-three months. No changes were made in participants' diets or medication for diabetes throughout the study.

The authors report that previous studies have shown that variability of the glucose level increases the risk of eye complications and death in type 2 diabetics. Dawson said that the authors believe that recognizing and treating sleep apnea could improve the outlook for diabetics who also suffer from OSA. Researchers involved in this study theorized that by using the CGMS they were able to pick up short-term changes in the glucose level that would not be detected by traditional measurements.


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Journal reference:

. CPAP Therapy of Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Type 2 diabetics Improves Glycemic Control during Sleep. Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, Dec 15, 2008
Adapted from materials provided by American Academy of Sleep Medicine, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.
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MLA American Academy of Sleep Medicine (2008, December 15). CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes Patients With Obstructive Sleep Apnea. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 15, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 074402.htm
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I have a vision that we will figure out an easy way to ensure that children develop wide, deep, healthy and attractive jaws and then obstructive sleep apnea becomes an obscure bit of history.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ycw4uaX ... re=related

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Re: CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by Driver59 » Mon Dec 15, 2008 8:43 pm

I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes a year ago this past August and diagnosed with mild sleep apnea in September of
this year. Lost 35 pounds since I learned I am diabetic and pretty much watch what I eat or more correctly how much I
eat. Take my meds faithfully and for a while the glucose levels were all over the place. That settled down after a while,
but it seemed to me that after starting cpap therapy my glucose levels stabilized. Regularly within a certain range no matter
when I test. If sleep apnea is connected with developing diabetes, maybe controling apnea might help control diabetes.
Hope so.
Don

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Re: CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by sleeplessinaz » Tue Dec 16, 2008 6:35 pm

I was diagnosed with Borderline type 2 diabetes this past April and diagnosed with mild Obstructive sleep apnea back in Nov. 2007. Lost 25 pounds since I learned I am pre-diabetic and pretty much watch how much I eat now. No more over eating!! and I also count CARBS. I use Byetta injections twice a day 5 MCG. --it helps to really curb my appetite and I take 1,000 mgs. Metformin at night. My last A1C was a 5.3 . I agree with the prior poster in the fact that ----" If sleep apnea is connected with developing diabetes, maybe controling apnea might help control diabetes". Seems like it is working good for me so far!!

Carrie

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Re: CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by taberge » Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:42 pm

sleeplessinaz wrote:I was diagnosed with Borderline type 2 diabetes this past April and diagnosed with mild Obstructive sleep apnea back in Nov. 2007. Lost 25 pounds since I learned I am pre-diabetic and pretty much watch how much I eat now. No more over eating!! and I also count CARBS. I use Byetta injections twice a day 5 MCG. --it helps to really curb my appetite and I take 1,000 mgs. Metformin at night. My last A1C was a 5.3 . I agree with the prior poster in the fact that ----" If sleep apnea is connected with developing diabetes, maybe controling apnea might help control diabetes". Seems like it is working good for me so far!!

Carrie
I don't think you are borderline if you are using both Byetta and 1000mg of Met, I am diabetic and using Met 500mg 2x daily. More than likely you are diabetic. What was your first A1C result? Mine was 9.8. The Met has a nice side effect of appetite suppression. It also is very anticarb, eat too many of them while your on Met and the gas and possible diarrhea is very real. I lost 35lbs in 3 months.

Anyways, I have seen too many articles linking Apnea and diabetes. I remember seeing a possibility that 50% chance that OSA sufferers are diabetic. The deal is that melatonin is made properly during the sleep cycle. Melatonin helps regulate your metabolism. Break the sleep cycle and you don't get good levels of melatonin which give you an increased chance of developing metabolic disorders like type 2 diabetes.

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Re: CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by Debjax » Tue Dec 16, 2008 9:44 pm

Thanks for that info. Hubby's levels in the morning fluctuate pretty bad, and he has not been able to figure out why. We're going to watch until he gets his CPAP next month (he goes for titration on Jan 22nd), when he has a bad reading in the morning, he's gonig to ask me how bad he slept / snored the night before. I'll bet we find a link.

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sleeplessinaz
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Re: CPAP Improves Sleeping Glucose Levels In Type 2 Diabetes

Post by sleeplessinaz » Tue Dec 16, 2008 10:30 pm

My first A1C was only a 6.1 so the doctor said I was only borderline. I take my blood suger tests regular and they are always low or in the normal range. The Byetta is for the weight loss more than the diabetes. It slows down your digestion so you feel full all the time so you eat less. My endo said if I am going to lose more weight in the next three months before my next appt--I will be off all the meds for diabetes. So I don't think I really HAVE diabetes but I did eat all the wrong things and did not exercise. Now, I exercise ALL the time and I count carbs which I learned how to do in the nutrition classes that I took thru the local hospital here. ALL THAT added onto to sleeping well---it is all good stuff!!!

Carrie

_________________
MachineMask
Additional Comments: new Airsense auto set 12/08/14. Cpap pressure is
Start Date 08/30/07
APAP setting is 6 to 12
HH 2.5
Side Sleeper
HypoThyroidism & Diabetes
New Airsense autoset 12/08/14