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Sleep apnea Causes and their types

When you stop breathing oxygen levels in the blood drop and carbon dioxide levels rise. This causes your heart to pump harder and sometimes to beat irregularly, or even to stop for several seconds

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Sleep apnea Causes and their types

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  1. Sleep apnea Causes and their types What is sleep apnea? Sleep apnea (sometimes also mistakenly written as sleep apnea or sleep apnoea) is a common and at the best addiction treatment center in Lahore, doctors are briefly discussed this, though often undiagnosed, sleep disorder in which you stop breathing during the night, sometimes people want to know Do We Need To Spend One-Third Of Our Lives Sleeping hundreds of times and for as much as a minute or more. The disorder derives its name from the Greek word "apnea" meaning "without breath". When you stop breathing oxygen levels in the blood drop and carbon dioxide levels rise. This causes your heart to pump harder and sometimes to beat irregularly, or even to stop for several seconds. Your diaphragm and chest muscles work harder and your blood pressure rises. Finally, the brain senses that your body is in trouble and wakes you sufficiently for you to breathe and, as you do so, your breathing will often be accompanied by loud snoring. It should be noted here that snoring itself is also very common and it is estimated that about forty percent of all adults snore. Snoring is also more commonly seen in men, rather than in women. While snoring is almost always seen in cases of sleep apnea, snoring by itself does not mean that you are suffering from sleep apnea.

  2. What causes sleep apnea? This condition most often occurs as the result of a blockage to the airway, usually when the soft tissue at the rear of the throat collapses and closes the throat. It can, however, also result from a failure by the brain to signal the muscles of the body that control breathing. What are the different types of sleep apnea? There are 3 main types of the disorder: Obstructive Sleep Apnea. This is the commonest and most severe form of sleep apnea and results from a blockage of the airway. In many cases, this is caused by the collapse of soft tissue at the rear of the throat, although this blockage can also be caused by several other structures including, the tongue, enlarged tonsils and polyps. Central Sleep Apnea. This form of the disorder results from the brain's failure to send the necessary signals to those muscles that are responsible for controlling breathing. Central sleep apnea is more common in older people and is often also associated with heart disease or with a variety of neurological disorders. Mixed Sleep Apnea. As its name would suggest, mixed sleep apnea is a combination of the first two types of this disorder. It is not uncommon for the primary cause to be central sleep apnea, with obstructive sleep apnea as a secondary consequence. In this case, central sleep apnea causes the initial failure to breathe but, as your brain reacts to the problem and signals your diaphragm into a sudden movement to restart your breathing, this creates a blockage, resulting in obstructive sleep apnea. Who suffers from sleep apnea? Sleep apnea affects people of all ages, including children, although it is more commonly seen in men over the age of 40. It is also more commonly seen in people who are overweight. In very young children sleep apnea has been linked with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), while in older children it is often associated with being overweight, or with having unusually large tonsils or adenoids. In the case of children, snoring should be taken as a warning sign of the possible presence of sleep apnea as, although snoring is common in the adult population, it is not something that is normally seen in children.

  3. Sleep apnea is also commonly seen in people with unusually large tongues, excessive tissue around the pharynx (the soft area at the top of the throat where the passages from the nose and mouth connect with the throat) and particularly small airways. There is also evidence to suggest that there may be a genetic basis for some instances of sleep apnea and that it is possible to inherit the condition.

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