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Squeaking, stop breathing, heavy chest and terrible dreams

Hi, I've been squeaking on and off for a few years, when I first started my family thought it was quite odd and funny however, it's becoming worse and worse as I am getting older (currently 26yrs, healthy, normal weight, non-smoker) to the point of joining this page for some guidance. 

My boyfriend is also worried because he says it seems like I'm struggling in my sleep. I stop breathing, take large gasps, squeak for long periods of time (he timed 20-30 seconds at a time). Add to this terrible nightmares most nights, waking up constantly, waking up tired and remaining tired for most of the day. 

I know I've been squeaking badly the night before if my chest feels heavy in the morning and remains heavy all day long. It feels like I'm not breathing enough. I have headaches most days, mood swings and can find it very hard to concentrate.

I tried cutting out sugar to help with the dreams, I exercise regularly (including yoga to help with my breathing) to exhaust my body so I won't squeak but nothing seems to work. My boyfriend says it's worse if I'm under pressure, which I certainly notice also. Some mornings it feels like I haven't slept for one full minute the night before. 

Has anyone had similar experiences, if so what did you do?.... or can anyone offer me any form of guidance... I miss sleeping. 

Kind regards

Katie 




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the headaches are because you stopped breathingyou need to see your doctor immediatly
Sleep Apnoea. The Silent Killer.

Sleep apnoea occurs when the walls of the throat come together during sleep, blocking off the upper airway at the level of the tongue. Breathing stops for a period of time (generally between a few seconds and up to one minute) until the brain registers the lack of breathing or a drop in oxygen levels and sends a small wake-up call. The sleeper rouses slightly, opens the upper airway, typically snorts and gasps, then drifts back to sleep almost immediately.

In most cases, the person suffering from sleep apnoea doesn’t even realise they are waking up. This pattern can repeat itself hundreds of times over every night, causing fragmented sleep. This leaves the person with unrefreshed sleep, excessive daytime sleepiness and fatigue caused by low oxygen levels in the blood. It’s estimated that about five per cent of Australians suffer from this sleep disorder, with around one in four men over the age of 30 years affected.

Untreated sleep apnoea can:

kill

Increase the risk for high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke, obesity, and diabetes.

Increase the risk for or worsen heart failure

Make irregular heartbeats more likely

Increase the chance of having work-related or driving accidents



Symptoms of sleep apnoea include:

Frequent gaps in breathing during sleep (apnoea).

Gasping or choking for air to restart breathing, often causing sleeper or partner to wake

Loud snoring.

Feeling unrefreshed after a night’s sleep and excessive daytime tiredness.

Poor concentration.

Irritability and mood changes.



There are three kinds of sleep apnoea.

1.Obstructive sleep apnoea. The throat is composed of collapsible walls of soft tissue which can obstruct breathing during sleep. When breathing stops it is jump started by signals from the brain.

2. Central sleep apnoea. This is where the brain ceases to send signals to the throat for a varying length of time.

3. Mixed apnoea and complex sleep apnoea. In both cases the signals from the brain can cease permanently, resulting in death.

Diagnosis can only be carried out by a sleep test which can be done at the Murray Valley Private Hospital or it can be done at home. It involves you being wired up and the information is recorded and sent away for diagnosis to a sleep specialist in.

Treatment involves using a CPAP machine to pump air into your lungs, increasing the air pressure thus pushing back into place the tongue and linings of the throat.

If in doubt, ask your GP. He could then refer you to treatment.

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