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Yesterday I spotted the following article due to be published in the 'SLEEP' Journal this month of a new study linking Insomnia with Sleep Apnoea.  It would certainly be worth anyone suffering from Insomnia having a sleep study to check.  Many people with Insomnia, when questioned, don't suspect they are sleep apnoea sufferers.  However, I've never suffered from Insomnia, but when Sleep Apnoea was suspected in me, I was absolutely certain that I wasn't a sufferer, and thought it was a waste of time having a sleep study.  How wrong I was!

 

Sleep & Human Health Institute New Study: Insomnia Linked to Sleep Apnea

Research suggests insomnia and sleep apnea co-occur more frequently than expected.

Quote start“We have known for nearly two decades that breathing plays an unexpected role in insomnia in general and sleep interruptions in particular, but we were surprised that 90% of awakenings were preceded by breathing events.”Quote end

Albuquerque, NM (PRWEB) December 07, 2012

A new study to be published in the journal SLEEP (December 2012) suggests nighttime awakenings experienced by people with chronic insomnia might be caused by sleep breathing problems.

The Sleep and Human Health Institute (SHHI) in Albuquerque, NM conducted the study on 20 patients who met diagnostic criteria for an insomnia disorder, denied having any classic symptoms of sleep disordered breathing (i.e.- loud snoring, apneas), and had no previous sleep testing. Patients in the study reported that awakenings, which cause or contribute to their insomnia, were usually caused by stress, nightmares, trips to the bathroom, racing thoughts, physical discomfort, worries, anxiety, or for unknown reasons.

However, when diagnostic polysomnography (sleep study) tests were conducted on each of the 20 patients, 478 of 531 (90%) total objective awakenings for these patients were directly preceded by sleep breathing events. Only 10% of awakenings were caused by non-breathing factors (leg jerks, laboratory interaction, or spontaneous). Of the 478 breathing-related awakenings, 30 resulted in an awakening interval greater than 5 minutes, a duration which increases the likelihood of an insomnia episode. All 30 of these extended awakenings were preceded by a breathing event.

The results of the study by SHHI furthered their nearly 20 years of investigation towards understanding the link between insomnia and sleep-disordered breathing, a co-morbidity that has been largely overlooked by the scientific community.

“We have known for nearly two decades that breathing plays an unexpected role in insomnia in general and sleep interruptions in particular, but we were surprised that 90% of awakenings were preceded by breathing events,” said Dr. Barry Krakow, principal investigator on the project.

In a recent New York Times report about the research study, Dr. Michael J. Sateia said “It is a striking finding that by no means can be discounted.” Dr. Sateia is a professor of psychiatry and sleep medicine at Dartmouth College’s school of medicine, and was not involved in the research. The New York Times article can be found here: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/03/insomnia-is-linked-to-trou....

The study appears in the December, 2012 issue of the journal SLEEP and is retrievable at: http://dx.doi.org/10.5665/sleep.2244. This issue will also feature an editorial about the project, “Is Insomnia a Breathing Disorder?”, written by two leading sleep researchers and is retrievable at: http://dx.doi.org/10.5665/sleep.2222.

Dr. Krakow is medical director of the Sleep and Human Health Institute, a non-profit sleep research institute specializing in the areas of sleep and mental health. The study was approved by Presbyterian Healthcare Services Institutional Review Board, Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Original Source http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/12/prweb10206456.htm

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Kath, on DS we get so many people saying they have insomnia but insomnia its self isn't an illness, its a symptom of an illness like SA or it can be caused by any other illness, if the cause is found i.e. SA and treated then the insomnia normally goes. I think too many people use Insomnia as a generic word for not sleeping, just my thoughts.

Yes, I agree that insomnia is a symptom of something else - just like pain lets us know there's a problem in the body.  I also get people who suspect they have sleep apnoea, say they actually fight sleep as they're scared of it!  When people are labelled with the term 'insomnia' then that can also cause greater problems.  Then of course, there are people who get diagnosed and, due to their initial problems of getting to sleep with the CPAP equipment on, find it difficult to sleep.

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