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I have severe sleep apnea and my doctor said that a dental device would not work for me. My dentist disagrees. I have not been using my CPAP for the past few months and figure that using the dental device would be better than nothing. What do YOU think?
Bex
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Although dental devices don't work as well for people with severe sleep apnea, it doesn't mean that it won't work for YOU. Research studies report averages and statistical significance. If you look at these studies, there were some people with severe obstructive sleep apnea that did respond to oral appliances. What this means is that you have a lower chance of responding to oral appliances, but it doesn't mean that you won't respond at all. There was even a Korean study a few years ago that showed that oral appliances worked very well in people with severe sleep apnea. The only way to tell if you're going to respond is to try it.
Ultimately, it's all in your anatomy. There are ways of seeing what happens to your airway when you thrust your lower jaw forward while flat on your back using an endoscope, but not many ENTs will do this. Dentists can take x-rays. Unfortunately, sleep doctors can only see in your mouth, but not your airway behind the tongue.
Thank you, I may try it.
Steven Y. Park, MD said:
Although dental devices don't work as well for people with severe sleep apnea, it doesn't mean that it won't work for YOU. Research studies report averages and statistical significance. If you look at these studies, there were some people with severe obstructive sleep apnea that did respond to oral appliances. What this means is that you have a lower chance of responding to oral appliances, but it doesn't mean that you won't respond at all. There was even a Korean study a few years ago that showed that oral appliances worked very well in people with severe sleep apnea. The only way to tell if you're going to respond is to try it.
Ultimately, it's all in your anatomy. There are ways of seeing what happens to your airway when you thrust your lower jaw forward while flat on your back using an endoscope, but not many ENTs will do this. Dentists can take x-rays. Unfortunately, sleep doctors can only see in your mouth, but not your airway behind the tongue.
I recommend being very scientific about any treatment you get. Do a sleep study without appliance and then one with the appliance!
Bex , Getting the right set up can be frusterating.....Their are many masks, machines, and doctors to choose from. Not all of them are a good fit so, find new ones. Put your vanity ,distain and frustration in your pocket and get figured out. What ever you choose to do .....Do something not nothing. Good Sleep,Chris
Ps it it means comming to nyc to see Dr Park find the courage to do it.
Bex,
I use a mandibular advancement device for my UARS. My husband, who also has UARS, chose to go to an in-network dentist, who happens to "do devices", versus my out-of-network sleep-dentist, who specializes. The knowledge, care, and outcome have been very different. I could not tolerate the CPAP, and I get such good sleep with the device (I can tell a difference with and without). I actually love my device. With that said, if you pursue it, please see a specialist who does a thorough evaluation. I also agree with doing a sleep study follow up, especially if you have severe apnea.
I also have severe Sleep Apnea, I use ResMed Elite II CPAP, I use to pull the mask off after about 4 hours of sleep if I wore it at all due to discomfort. Once I began using the dental device I was able to wear the CPAP all night without issue. I have not asked my sleep doctor about this however I figure if it allows me to wear the CPAP all night that its a good thing.
Bryan
I tried a dental device, cpap pro. While it seemed like a good idea, and probably is - I followed all directions for proper fitting of mouthpiece, etc. My teeth hurt while using this - my dentist says that these devices can cause your teeth to realign themselves. Also, since I had to clamp my mouth shut and try to keep my mouth closed all night, I would wake up after a few hours with the appliance having moved from off my bottom teeth and with my mouth open and saliva having run down the side of my mouth to the point where my pillow was saturated. So, this did not work for me. I actually felt that with this new alignment of my lower jaw and teeth, it hurt too much for me. Maybe for someone else it would work just fine, that person just isn't me.
So, back to the full-face mask for me.
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