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Understanding Sleep Apnea and Its Impact
Sleep Apnea is a common disorder that causes interruptions in breathing during sleep, preventing oxygen from reaching the brain. Sufferers wake hundreds of times per night, each time normal breathing is interrupted and the brain is depleted of oxygen. As a result, they never feel rested and experience excessive daytime grogginess. There are three types: obstructive, central and complex, which is a combination of the first two.
Central Sleep Apnea is caused when the brain fails to properly signal the muscles to breath. It is very uncommon and snoring is generally not a symptom.
Who Gets Obstructive Sleep Apnea?
- Excess weight, especially obesity – about half of all OSA sufferers are overweight
- Male, although recent research has indicated that women’s risk increases to about the same level as men once they reach post-menopausal age
- Over the age of 60
- Smoking
- Enlarged tonsils and adenoids, one of the most common factors for children with OSA, particularly overweight children
- Having certain anatomical features such as a thick neck, narrowed airway, deviated spectrum or a receding chin
- Using alcohol, sedatives and tranquilizers, all of which relax the muscles in the airway
- Having asthma, in adults and children, particularly if they are overweight
- Race and ethnicity can play a part as well – some studies have indicated African Americans, Hispanics and other races have a slightly higher risk
- Allergies and chronic nasal congestion
Is Obstructive Sleep Apnea Dangerous?
- Brain damage
- Diabetes
- Cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension (high blood pressure), heart failure, stroke, heart arrhythmias (irregular heartbeat), myocardial ischemia (decreased blood flow to the heart) and pulmonary arterial hypertension (high blood pressure in the lungs)
- Cognitive Impairments such as dementia, ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and other cognition / behavioral problems
- Certain types of cancer
- Depression and anxiety
- Higher risk of injury or death from car and other accidents

Is Obstructive Sleep Apnea Treatable?
How Do I Know if It’s Obstructive Sleep Apnea?
Only a doctor or sleep specialist can confirm if you or a loved one is suffering from OSA. At Sanilac Smiles Dental Care, we can evaluate you and connect you with a sleep physician to complete testing. We can also work with your physician to provide you with an oral appliance that can treat sleep apnea and snoring.
If you or your loved one experience more than one or two of the symptoms below, you should seek help to either diagnose or rule out OSA.
Obstructive Sleep Apnea Symptoms
- Loud, frequent snoring
- Uneven breathing – periods of silence followed by gasps or snorts
- Frequent waking, sometimes with chest pain
- Insomnia
- Dry mouth or sore throat in the morning
- Mood problems such as depression and irritability
- Excessive daytime sleepiness that interferes with normal activities such as driving
- Chronic exhaustion even after a full-night’s sleep
- Headaches
- Difficulty concentrating
- Been diagnosed with ADHD (in children and adults) – sometimes OSA is misdiagnosed as ADHD
