Post
by echo » Thu Jul 19, 2007 6:36 am
I'm a 5'7" female, 30 years old, and currently weigh (sigh) 190 lbs.
HOWEVER, in the vein of some of the posts questioning the beer belly/obesity - OSA link, I now know that I have had sleep apnea my whole life (symptoms go back to when I was a little kid), and up until the age of 20 or so I did tons of sports (basketball, track, swimming, weight training), was always within the "normal" weight ranges, didn't have belly or neck fat, and STILL had sleep problems. So no, you definitely don't have to be obese to have OSA! I do however see a link between gaining weight and worsening OSA, and vice versa, for me personally.
Two things my sleep dr said that struck me:
- She said she could tell even before doing the sleep study that I would be prone to OSA, because I had a small jaw/chin
- When I complained about not being able to lose weight even though I was so fit when I was younger, she said that there's a high probability that the OSA is causing some of the weight gain / inability to lose it. That was like a weight being lifted off my chest, up until now everyone criticised my weight and said that i would sleep better if I lost it, but now I know that perhaps it's not that I'm lazy, or undisciplined, or stupid or whatever, there's a real biological obstacle there. So I don't feel like a total failure when all my attempts at eating and living healthy aren't working like they should. I'm realy looking forwrad to having more energy with the CPAP and getting back into exercising!
Just one more comment about the stats regarding OSA and obesity (based on one of the previous posts): just because "most" people diagnosed with OSA are overweight doesn't mean that most people that HAVE OSA are overweight - it just means that overweight people probably are more likely to get diagnosed. So in my opinion when campainging for OSA we need to make sure people understand that ANYONE can have OSA, and not necessarily a 50-yr old male with a beer belly.
Hoseheads unite!