The cause is neurological, unlike the more common "obstructive" type of sleep apnea. Her brain is just not telling the body to breathe the way it should when she's asleep. Treating the symptoms is about the best you can do at this point....don't wanna go messin with the brain!
The other answers on here are talking about the other kind of sleep apnea.
2007-08-26 03:31:52
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Hi . Sleep Apnea as you know is very serious . For this reason alone you should keep seeing different Doctors if need be .
I have severe obstructive Sleep Apnea and use a Bi-Pap machine to help me sleep at night .
From what I have read on this you may be able to have surgery to correct Her medical condition . Do more research
and sit down with your daughter and go over every option but this needs to be done asap . This can definitely affect ones heart , lungs , cause high blood pressure , and lead to being overweight , which can cause diabetes .
2007-08-26 03:40:27
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answer #2
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answered by bigfred1954 4
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I have sleep apnea. If she is overweight - the breathing problems would be reduced or might be alleviated by losing weight - but do not stop using the CPAP machine without medical evaluation. This is a very serious problem - after losing weight she needs to go to the sleep lab for a new evaluation to see if it has helped.
If your daughter is young, you may be able to look into surgical options - they can remove the tissue at the back of the throat that is causing the obstruction.
2007-08-26 04:29:22
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answer #3
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answered by dark_and_bright 1
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I've known several people with sleep apnea 32 times an hour isn't that bad but he really needs a machine handy just to be on the safe side by the way it can get ALLOT worse so he should be just fine i think
2016-04-02 00:09:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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If she has had a sleep test then I am guessing the doctor checked her over and everything else is normal.
If your daughter is extremely overweight, losing that weight would help, but a CPAP machine is the way to go
Tell your daughter it lets her sleep better. It took me 30 days to get used to mine and now I love it, I cant and dont want to sleep without it.
Apnea is the #1 cause of dying in your sleep. It's nothing to take lightly
Good luck
2007-08-26 03:34:23
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answer #5
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answered by eddie9551 5
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The doctor doesn't want to find the cause for a couple of reasons. The first is right now there is no cure and the second is who is going to foot the millions of dollars to outfit a lab, pay their bills and salary when research is already being done at labs and Universities.
If there is another "cure" beside "oxygen injection or positive pressure" I am not aware of it.
2007-08-26 03:47:08
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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My mother suffers from this also. We asked if she could do some exercises to help but she was told it wouldn't be worth it at all. So now she must use an oxygen mask during the night and she sleeps way better than before. It helped her so much. Now I think there are natural ways to help your daughter... Have you ever heard of Emoto's works about the incredible power of a simple element like water?
I invite you to check this website https://www.hado.net/
and once you are familiar with what this scientific did, you will know that water can be "structured" to help to heal anything or almost. This website http://healingwateronline.com/pages/276.htm offers you special pieces of songs (TB - triple breath) made especially to structure the water you drink and help to recover from whatever you want. You can also contact the owner (Torben who is from Denmark) and who can make one song especially for your problems.
Good luck to you
2007-08-26 03:38:16
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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See sleep apnoea, at http://www.ezy-build.net.nz/~shaneris on page 3: it has links to many other sleep disorder websites. You could try sewing a tennis ball in the back of her pajamas, to force her to sleep on her side, which makes for deeper breathing. Alternatively, try hypnotherapy. It would help if she practised deeper breathing every day, to build up those muscles (don't hyperventilate: just a few deep breaths, often, well spaced apart). If all else fails, there are specialist clinics, but they don't come cheap.
2007-08-26 04:13:18
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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My dad has this as well and doesnt like to think of the idea of being hooked up to a machine while he sleeps. It didn't work for him much, but you could try the nose strips to help you breathe.
2007-08-26 03:32:29
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Being overweight is often an important issue. One thing that helped me was doing facial exercises for a double chin. Either stick your tongue out and try to touch the tip of your nose or push your tongue against the roof of your mouth. Both exercises strengthen the muscles under your jaw.
2007-08-26 09:08:30
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answer #10
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answered by the mazda mechanic 4
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