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Is it true that untreated osa can cause csa?

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so the question i think you're asking without abbreviations is whether untreated Obstructive Sleep Apnea can cause Central Sleep Apnea?
that is a very sobering sumery which i concur

j n k sai
The larger, primary issue is that untreated OSA can cause death. It is a secondary issue that before that happens, many other things can go wrong along the way, including things that can lead to central sleep apnea.

Untreated OSA can cause damage to every organ in your body, including your heart and brain.

Ineffective sleep is bad. Ineffective breathing is bad. Fix them both before the body and brain are damaged further.
Untreated obstructive apnea can lead to the causes of central apnea. these include, but are not limited to congestive heart failure, brain damage, central nervous system disorder, strokes, and seizures. Typically the first results of untreated OSA will be hypertension, diabetes, and heart palpitations. These will be typically seen after snoring and daytime fatigue. The important thing is to recognize and treat the problem as sson as possible. Currently the education is inefficient to hit the mainstream with the large effect needed to help the problem. This is why we need to keep telling the success stories seeen on sleepguide. Let em know Sandra.
I'd like to ask a related question. Can treating obstructive sleep apnea get rid of central sleep apnea? I was diagnosed with both according to my sleep MD. He seems to think that the Centrals will likely go away once the obstructive apneas are under control.

Thanks
Jan
Your doc is correct. Treatment of OSA can eliminate some CSA events. Typically these events are not true CSA as they are caused by the arousals and constant sleep fragmentation brought on by severe OSA. Usually in these situations another sleep evaluation is done after 6-12 months on PAP therapy. There is a much longer explanation, but this is it in a nutshell. Ican't seem to find it in my mountain of sleep files, but I believe I posted a study on this in a discussion about centrals a few weeks earlier.

Jan said:
I'd like to ask a related question. Can treating obstructive sleep apnea get rid of central sleep apnea? I was diagnosed with both according to my sleep MD. He seems to think that the Centrals will likely go away once the obstructive apneas are under control.

Thanks
Jan
When I was first diagnosed and found SG, you may have posted some info in response to questions I asked about central...I have a lot of "new facts" in my brain since joining in on discussions on SG-- let me go back and check to see if I can located the conversation.

As always,
Thanks,
Jan
Thanks Rock, very informative...I didn't know how serious OSA&CSA was until I came across the site.

Rock Hinkle said:
Untreated obstructive apnea can lead to the causes of central apnea. these include, but are not limited to congestive heart failure, brain damage, central nervous system disorder, strokes, and seizures. Typically the first results of untreated OSA will be hypertension, diabetes, and heart palpitations. These will be typically seen after snoring and daytime fatigue. The important thing is to recognize and treat the problem as sson as possible. Currently the education is inefficient to hit the mainstream with the large effect needed to help the problem. This is why we need to keep telling the success stories seeen on sleepguide. Let em know Sandra.
If you can't let me know and i will dig through my hard drive for it.

Jan said:
When I was first diagnosed and found SG, you may have posted some info in response to questions I asked about central...I have a lot of "new facts" in my brain since joining in on discussions on SG-- let me go back and check to see if I can located the conversation.

As always,
Thanks,
Jan
Rock, I rest my case about your value to the SG community...............

McCord :-)
Rock, I Rock my case about your value to the SG community...............

Sorry Susan about the plagarism

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