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WASHINGTON, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Severe sleep apnea raises the risk of dying early by 46 percent, U.S. researchers reported on Monday, but said people with milder sleep-breathing problems do not share that risk.

They said people with severe breathing disorders during sleep were more likely to die from a variety of causes than similar people without such sleep disorders. The risks are most obvious in men aged 40 to 70, Naresh Punjabi of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and colleagues found.

Sleep apnea is caused by a collapse of the upper airway during sleep. Strong snoring can be a symptom but what makes apnea different are numerous brief interruptions in breathing.

Sleep apnea is closely linked with obesity, high blood pressure, heart failure and stroke, but researchers have not been able to clearly quantify how much more likely it makes a person to die.

Punjabi's team studied 6,400 men and women for an average of eight years. Those who started with major sleep apnea were 46 percent more likely to die from any cause, regardless of age, sex, race, weight or smoking, they reported in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Medicine.

Men aged 40 to 70 with severe sleep-disordered breathing were twice as likely to die from any cause as healthy men the same age, they reported in the study -- available online ">here

"Among men, 42.9 percent did not have sleep-disordered breathing, 33.2 percent had mild disease, 15.7 percent had moderate disease, and 8.2 percent had severe disease," they wrote.

They said about 25 percent of the women had mild sleep apnea, 8 percent had moderate disease and 3 percent had severely disordered breathing.

The researchers, funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health, said people with milder sleep-breathing disorders were not more likely to die early.

The NHLBI estimates 12 million adult Americans have sleep apnea, but most are not diagnosed or treated. The National Sleep Foundation puts the number at 18 million.

"In severe sleep apnea a patient's airway is blocked while the patient suffers for 20 to 30 seconds and wakes up.

"When it becomes this frequent -- 30 times per hour -- about every two minutes it is severe sleep apnea and can become a problem," said Dr. David Rapoport of New York University, who worked on the study.

"The best treatment for sleep apnea is weight loss. However, the most successful treatment can be a nasal CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) mask that applies pressure to help keep the airways of a patient open while they sleep, allowing normal breathing," he added in a statement.

"Another possible helpful treatment is surgery. That may include tonsil removal," said Rapoport. "A mouth guard that pulls a patient's mouth forward is another option."

A small Canadian company, Victhom Human Bionics Inc. (VHB.TO), has filed a patent on a new device to detect sleep apnea, which must usually be diagnosed in a sleep lab and Medtronic Inc. (MDT.N) makes sleep apnea devices.

http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssHealthcareNews/idUSN173964282009...

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Well. THAT'S a lovely piece of information. I'm diagnosed severe and have heart disease already, am at (family) risk for diabetes, and I forget the other thing because I don't want to remember it~~however, I'm not overweight, my blood pressure's under control, I'm taking a ton of heart medicine, I'm ON CPAP!, and I wonder how all this affects my risk of dying prematurely....

Mike, I think I'm gonna use this last bit of info as an excuse for the obnoxious humor I continue to post here. Jeez, if my days are numbered, I want to get it all out of my system first!!! LOL
And if you ever feel the need to rein me in, please do so. But remember I'm livin' on borrowed time!!! Still LOL.............

This is my brain under exhaustion stress! I think I should be caged today.........!!!!!!!

Susan McCord
Susan, I know that you're serious about treatment. But a lot of folks aren't, and unfortunately need to see stuff like this in a news report put out by a reputable news agency like Reuters to take any of it seriously.

susan mccord said:
Well. THAT'S a lovely piece of information. I'm diagnosed severe and have heart disease already, am at (family) risk for diabetes, and I forget the other thing because I don't want to remember it~~however, I'm not overweight, my blood pressure's under control, I'm taking a ton of heart medicine, I'm ON CPAP!, and I wonder how all this affects my risk of dying prematurely....

Mike, I think I'm gonna use this last bit of info as an excuse for the obnoxious humor I continue to post here. Jeez, if my days are numbered, I want to get it all out of my system first!!! LOL
And if you ever feel the need to rein me in, please do so. But remember I'm livin' on borrowed time!!! Still LOL.............

This is my brain under exhaustion stress! I think I should be caged today.........!!!!!!!

Susan McCord
Mike, please don't misunderstand what I said. I need to hear it too. Seriously now, I wasn't saying it shouldn't be posted. I absolutely think it SHOULD!! It just makes me more motivated than ever to stick with treatment. Kinda like that video, but not as difficult. It IS hard to hear that kind of research report, but where would all of us be without research?? I'm okay with it.

McCord :-)

susan mccord said:
Well. THAT'S a lovely piece of information. I'm diagnosed severe and have heart disease already, am at (family) risk for diabetes, and I forget the other thing because I don't want to remember it~~however, I'm not overweight, my blood pressure's under control, I'm taking a ton of heart medicine, I'm ON CPAP!, and I wonder how all this affects my risk of dying prematurely....

Mike, I think I'm gonna use this last bit of info as an excuse for the obnoxious humor I continue to post here. Jeez, if my days are numbered, I want to get it all out of my system first!!! LOL
And if you ever feel the need to rein me in, please do so. But remember I'm livin' on borrowed time!!! Still LOL.............

This is my brain under exhaustion stress! I think I should be caged today.........!!!!!!!

Susan McCord
I now totally understand where you were coming from Susan.

susan mccord said:
Mike, please don't misunderstand what I said. I need to hear it too. Seriously now, I wasn't saying it shouldn't be posted. I absolutely think it SHOULD!! It just makes me more motivated than ever to stick with treatment. Kinda like that video, but not as difficult. It IS hard to hear that kind of research report, but where would all of us be without research?? I'm okay with it.

McCord :-)

susan mccord said:
Well. THAT'S a lovely piece of information. I'm diagnosed severe and have heart disease already, am at (family) risk for diabetes, and I forget the other thing because I don't want to remember it~~however, I'm not overweight, my blood pressure's under control, I'm taking a ton of heart medicine, I'm ON CPAP!, and I wonder how all this affects my risk of dying prematurely....

Mike, I think I'm gonna use this last bit of info as an excuse for the obnoxious humor I continue to post here. Jeez, if my days are numbered, I want to get it all out of my system first!!! LOL
And if you ever feel the need to rein me in, please do so. But remember I'm livin' on borrowed time!!! Still LOL.............

This is my brain under exhaustion stress! I think I should be caged today.........!!!!!!!

Susan McCord

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