Re: Poll Re: Apnea and Your Weight
Posted: Fri Aug 07, 2015 3:55 am
And even wt alone doesn't tell how long you've had it, the distribution, whether you work out and how much of it is fat vs muscle, if you're diabetic, etc.
But many of us have been on cpap for many years. I have been on it for 6 years. I have gained weight due to other circumstances. I know when my OSA kicked in - 27 years ago when I was pregnant of my last kid. After giving birth I weighed 110 lbs but I still snored badly and gasped but all the doctor did was give me antihistamines. Post menopause I gained a bit. By the time I actually got my cpap machine I had put on more weight. I dropped some but gained a lot while doing caregiving due to not being able to do much in the way of exercise plus emotional eating. So current avatars and weight have little to do with OSA in many cases.Captain_Midnight wrote: As an aside, I've thought it would be interesting if folks posted their current weight along w their avatar. (This would be resisted by many, hereabouts, so I withdraw the suggestion.)
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Tumomilehto et al. is probably the most cited study, where they studied the affects of weight loss intervention:BlackSpinner wrote:Your peer reviewed study that shows this please. Because the weight surgery study showed that 49% of people kept on having OSA after weight loss. Some got worse.Enchanter wrote:Julie wrote:You could win the Tour de France and not get rid of your apnea - it doesn't work that way and I think you know it.
Only a small fraction of people with OSA are thin. Some are, but most can get rid of OSA if they were in exceptionally good shape.
So at the very least, those, who can improve their sleep apnea or cure it completely via weight-loss, there is a possibility of lessening if not normalizing their sleep apnea. Now an interesting study would be to compare those who do not experience a benefit of weight loss and those who do, and find out what the anatomical differences for the diffrent groups are.tuomilehto wrote:Nonetheless, that study showed that weight-reduction programs do have an important role even for patients with more severe OSA. It has been commonly claimed that a lifestyle change may not be sufficient when treating patients with OSA; however, 3 recent randomized studies have shown that the more aggressive treatment of obesity in OSA patients is well-founded (12, 13, 26). In the present study, it was noted that the larger the change in body weight, the greater the improvement in OSA. Furthermore, the data from the 3-, 12-, and 24-mo sleep measurements were consistent in strongly favoring the weight-reduction group. It has been suggested that sleep disturbance co-aggregates with other components of the metabolic syndrome and could be its second most important determinant, after obesity (27). Therefore, it is notable that in the present study, in conjunction with the improvement in OSA, weight reduction was also found to result in improvements in other obesity-related risk factors for cardiovascular diseases.
We agree, and we have a somewhat similar story (at least in the early years of undiagnosed OSA).BlackSpinner wrote:
But many of us have been on cpap for many years. I have been on it for 6 years. I have gained weight due to other circumstances. I know when my OSA kicked in - 27 years ago when I was pregnant of my last kid. After giving birth I weighed 110 lbs but I still snored badly and gasped but all the doctor did was give me antihistamines. Post menopause I gained a bit. By the time I actually got my cpap machine I had put on more weight. I dropped some but gained a lot while doing caregiving due to not being able to do much in the way of exercise plus emotional eating. So current avatars and weight have little to do with OSA in many cases.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I started ignoring this thread after so many defensive reactions, good to come back and see some nice discussion going on now. Knowing the Internet all too well I made a point of explicitly stating in my first post:Did you miss the thread title? The subject is the relationship between weight and OSA. Not whether thin people with OSA don't exist. I didn't even leave out that possibility. Re-Read my post. I clearly listed 11 conditions and factors that can lead to sleep apnea. But I also discussed weight as a related issue.
What post did they even read?! Certainly not the same one I did, frankly I think you used too many large words ."So quit blaming ALL sleep apnea on being fat!"
Heart Jumping wrote: Yet still had to get several lectures. Heck, I even learned that it's "rude to ask"...evidently anonymously on a forum where people go by fake names. If this is how people react to being asked a simple completely non-judgmental question on a forum, no wonder doctors have such a hard time with people getting offended when they ask certain questions or discuss certain subjects. I laughed when I read your first well stated post, only to see you also get the response of:
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I stopped wasting my time reading past the sentence above because like several other posters you evidently start projecting what you think someones views are based on your own false assumptions. Please do tell me what my "premise is" and how it's "not the one I think". I'm dying to know what you think it is since I've never stated it.zoocrewphoto wrote:I still disagree with your whole premise. There is a correlation, but not the one you think.
Heart Jumping wrote:I stopped wasting my time reading past the sentence above because like several other posters you evidently react to something emotionally and start projecting what you think someones views are based on false assumptions. Please do tell me what my "premise is" and how it's "not the one I think". I'm dying to know what you think it is since I've never stated it.zoocrewphoto wrote:I still disagree with your whole premise. There is a correlation, but not the one you think.
Once again it's not worth reading past this sentence. At no point did I state anything close to that and in fact went out of my way to state that I was not saying that.zoocrewphoto wrote:It was pretty obvious from the first post that you believe that fat causes sleep apnea.
well, if you can't be bothered to read what someone says when they disagree with you, then perhaps nobody else should read past the first sentence when you write your argumentative and dismissive posts.Heart Jumping wrote:Once again it's not worth reading past this sentence. At no point did I state anything close to that and in fact went out of my way to state that I was not saying that.zoocrewphoto wrote:It was pretty obvious from the first post that you believe that fat causes sleep apnea.
One more example of poor critical thinking skills, suggesting that it's wrong to be dismissive of ridiculous statements.palerider wrote:
well, if you can't be bothered to read what someone says when they disagree with you, then perhaps nobody else should read past the first sentence when you write your argumentative and dismissive posts.
So it is ok for you to ignore what others say? I guess I can stop reading beyond YOUR first sentence and just assume you are wrong in flogging your dead horse?Heart Jumping wrote:I stopped wasting my time reading past the sentence above because like several other posters you evidently start projecting what you think someones views are based on your own false assumptions. Please do tell me what my "premise is" and how it's "not the one I think". I'm dying to know what you think it is since I've never stated it.zoocrewphoto wrote:I still disagree with your whole premise. There is a correlation, but not the one you think.
Heart Jumping wrote:Once again it's not worth reading past this sentence.
So you initiate a poll, but then you start explaining how everyone taking the poll is stupid? Brings into question your decision to take a poll of stupid people, doesn't it?Heart Jumping wrote:One more example of poor critical thinking skills