Just looking at another site I am on and came across this article, I think we all know it but it was interesting as I went to 5 different specialist and they all diagnosed Depression but not one suggested a sleep study even though I kept saying I couldn't breathe. It wasn't till I said I have to see a sleep specialist that I got some results.
Sleep Apnea and Depression Posted in Sleep Apnea by Cyndi Sarnoff-Ross on Apr 25, 2012 The Centers for Disease Control has reported that Sleep Apnea is related to Depression. Sleep Apnea is a condition in which sleep is disturbed by the repeated cessation of breathing during slumber. I have written previously about the importance of adequate sleep to one’s mental health. In my own practice I have seen many cases of depression and anxiety that are directly connected to lack of sleep.
Snoring, while a great annoyance to one’s partner, did not appear to affect the quality of sleep in the CDC’s research (at least not for the person doing the snoring.) The disturbance was specifically related to the gasping for air, snorting, or the complete stoppage of breathing that ultimately translated into higher rates of depression.
The study’s author, Anne G. Wheaton, Ph.D., reported that the frequency of snorting, or episodes where breathing stopped, was related to how likely a person was to have depression.
It is important for clinicians to screen for the presence of sleep apnea when sleepiness is reported as a symptom of depression. It is always critical to rule out the presence of physical conditions when diagnosing individuals with any mental health disorder.
- Cyndi
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Yes, it makes complete sense that undiagnosed Sleep Apnoea, as well as causing physical illnesses can also cause mental/emotional issues too. Our bodies need to spend 1/3rd of each day in good quality sleep, so if this isn't happening there are going to be big repercussions.
I wrote a Blog recently on this very subject:- The Link Between Sleep Apnoea + Depression
I know - Twitter's been full of it :( So many links to different conditions. Thank goodness for Colin Sullivan and CPAP.
I was diagnosed with Fibromyalgia and depression. Have been to numerous specialists, pain clinic, taken buckets of different drugs..
My greatest problem was my 'asthma' and pain in my hands and arms which woke me every night despite the strongest painkillers and antidepressents. The first night I trialled a xPAP I did not wake with hand and arm pains and now, three weeks later have still not experienced them again. Looking back at a diary I first went to my GP in 2003 with the pain. It was immediately presumed it was caused by depression. She now says it was most probably oxygen starvation.
And the depression lifted the first week on CPAP, came back last week, but I had some very early starts, a funeral and lots of leakage.
The number of people I come across, especially women, with fibromyalgia as well is amazing. It's great to read how after just a very short period of successful CPAP treatment your pain has already diminished and you felt the depression lifting. Once you've got the 'right' mask for you and have got your treatment comfortable, you have a much brighter healthier life to look forward to Judith :)
There's a study just out today proving that CPAP therapy improves depression with and without antidepressants http://www.sciencecodex.com/pap_therapy_improves_depressive_symptom...
Your story is so typical of ones I hear all the time. I think the confusing thing is that depression often follows stressful events in peoples lives that would have happened whether or not they had sleep apnoea. However, if people are being treated for OSA then they're not sleep deprived, so therefore they are far more able to handle the stresses of life better.
hi all you hoseheads,i was diagnosed with fibromyalgia in 2003 and SA in 2004 since then my sa and fibro has got steadely worse,my sleep is broken with pain,and then have problems getting back to sleep.i spend hours trying to sleep to no avail,i am wheelchair bound most of the day,darnt have a nap in the day incase i cant sleep at night.vicious circle.i take lots of medication including morphine and antidepressants,would love to have a FULL nights sleep.i would not wish any of these illnesses on anyone.i have had alot of help from my gp and the hospital but wish they could find a cure,but with a bit of help now and again still keep positve.all the best.muz
Poor you, Martin - you are in difficult position. You need your morphine for the pain, yet as you know, both morphine and antidepressants usually make sleep apnoea worse. Do the sleep clinic check on your AHI and adjust your pressure accordingly? I have also read about some antidepressants taken in a morning, rather than an evening, help for people with OSA.
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