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Sleep apnea and attention deficit
Jamie Phelps | Feb 18 2006
I have been having trouble with attention deficit symptoms that have progressively worsened over the past 2-3 years. I was talking with a friend who said that he used to have similar problems and that he was finally diagnosed with sleep apnea. Once he started using a CPAP machine, his apnea was much better, his wife would not have to sleep on the couch, and his cognitive functioning was markedly improved. The research on sleep apnea that I have been reading indicates that sleep apnea can cause attention deficit troubles. I am pretty sure I'm a good candidate for sleep apnea, as I reflect two of the three common risk factors: overweight, middle-aged, male. I'm 25, so I'll let you guess which two I fit. I'm 5'10 1/2" and weigh in at around 230. The most basic treatment for sleep apnea is to lose weight. After that, tests and such have to be run that would be a strain on my student budget. I have health insurance, but $300 for a test that I wasn't planning for is a little steep. So, all that being said, anyone here have experience with sleep apnea? Did you experience attention deficit troubles as a result? How much did correcting your sleep apnea help your attention deficit symptoms? What treatments helped you? Did simply losing weight help or do you use a CPAP? I don't think I am a candidate for SA surgery, but if anyone has any experience with that, I would like to hear about that as well. I have contemplated taking medication for the attention deficit symptoms, but I would much rather fix the problem than treat the symptoms. Thanks in advance. 32 Comments
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Borderline apneaSubmitted by Douglas on February 23, 2006 - 1:57pm.
I can't comment on those with ADD or diagnosed problems or make light of their problems but I believe that "teaching" your body when it is time to sleep or stop work can be very useful. I try to bike home at the end of work - the burst of activity lets me work my frustrations out rather than carry them home and it tells my body that work is over, concentrate on home life. Over at http://www.to-done.com Josh says that a shower before bed aids his sleep. In winter, I try to have a mug of hot chocolate before bed - the point of all this is to train yourself with an activity that marks the end of one activity and preparation for another. In the GTD view it is autonomic NA signal. » POSTED IN:
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