The depression symptoms also seem to be worse for men who have both
apnea and insomnia compared to men with depression but without this
combination of sleep problems, the authors report in the journal
Respirology.
“Obstructive sleep apnea and insomnia are the two most common sleep
disorders and can occur together in the same individual,” lead
author Dr. Carol Lang, a researcher at the Basil Hetzel Institute at
the University of Adelaide Queen Elizabeth Hospital Campus, told
Reuters Health.
“We know that each of these disorders is individually associated
with poor physical and mental health outcomes in patients. However,
we don’t know very much about if, or how, the two disorders interact
with each other and the health outcomes when they coexist in the
same individual,” Lang said in an email.
A person with obstructive sleep apnea has their breathing
interrupted multiple times during sleep by narrowed or blocked
airways. The condition is often treated by wearing a continuous
positive airway pressure, or CPAP, mask to keep the airway open.
Insomnia was defined in this study as the inability to fall or stay
asleep together with feeling fatigued during the day.
Lang and her colleagues enrolled 700 mostly middle aged men in
Adelaide with no diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea. All of them
underwent at-home sleep monitoring known as polysomnography and
answered questions about their sleep habits, health conditions and
possible depression symptoms.
Researchers found that more than half of the men had undiagnosed
obstructive sleep apnea. In the entire group, 323 men had sleep
apnea only, 37 had insomnia only and 47 had both conditions.
Of the men with both sleep apnea and insomnia, 43 percent also had
depression, compared with 22 percent of the men who had insomnia
alone and 8 percent of the men who had sleep apnea alone.
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Sleep deprivation, which may occur in chronic insomnia, is known to
adversely affect muscles involved in breathing and may contribute to
the propensity and severity of sleep apnea, Lang noted.
“There are also many biochemical signaling pathways in the body
through which sleep apnea, insomnia, and depression may interact
with each other,” she said.
If one of the sleep disorders is suspected, primary care providers
should consider the possibility of co-existing sleep apnea and
insomnia as well as their patient’s mental health, said Lang.
“Since some hypnotic medications could potentially be
counter-productive, patients should be referred to sleep clinics,
and if necessary mental health clinics, for further investigation so
that the most appropriate treatment strategy can be implemented for
them as an individual,” she said.
Our sleep is important for our physical and mental health, Lang
added, and a person who experiences sleep problems should talk to a
medical practitioner to see if further investigation is necessary.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2tqz3bK Respirology, online June 7, 2017.
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