Sleep Apnea Treatment Grand Rapids MI

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sleep Apnea Treatment. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sleep Apnea Treatment, including "Sleep Apnea and Your Heart". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Grand Rapids, MI that will answer all of your questions about Sleep Apnea Treatment.

Saint Mary's Health Care
(616) 685-6422
200 Jefferson SE
Grand Rapids, MI
Barry John Decker, MD
616-752-6741
300 Lafayette Ave SE
Grand Rapids, MI
Lee C Marmion, MD
616-391-3759
4100 Lake Dr SE Ste 100
Grand Rapids, MI
Lapeer Regional Medical Center Sleep Center
(810) 667-5566
1083 Suncrest Drive
Lapeer, MI
Henry Ford Sleep Disorders and Research Center Henry Ford Health System
(313) 916-4417
2799 W. Grand Boulevard
Detroit, MI
Spectrum Health Sleep Disorders Center
(616) 391-3759
4100 Lake Drive SE
Grand Rapids, MI
Lee C Marmion, MD
616-391-3759
4100 Lake Dr SE Ste 100
Grand Rapids, MI
Michigan Neurology Institute PC
(586) 771-7440
25100 Kelly Road
Roseville, MI
Sound aSleep Sleep Diagnostic Lab*
(989) 792-2792
4701 Towne Centre
Saginaw, MI
Life Care Sleep and Health Center Lansing
(517) 323-9624
7200 W. Saginaw Highway
Lansing, MI
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Sleep Apnea and Your Heart

Snoring loudly enough to wake up your sleeping spouse may be more than just annoying, it could signal a serious health problem. Sleep apnea is a disorder in which breathing repeatedly stops and starts, waking you-and your bed partner-from a sound sleep.

There are two main types of sleep apnea: obstructive sleep apnea in which the muscles in the back of your throat relax, narrowing or closing your breathing airway, causing your breathing to momentarily stop, which wakes you from sleep. The less common form of sleep apnea is central sleep apnea in which your brain fails to transmit signals to your breathing muscles, causing you to awaken with shortness of breath.

Sleep apnea can lead to a host of health maladies, especially cardiovascular disease, including high blood pressure, heart failure, stroke, and heart arrhythmias. The link between sleep apnea and heart disease may be associated with obesity, although studies are suggesting that sleep apnea itself may lead to or worsen cardiovascular problems.

Signs of Sleep Apnea

Some of the most common symptoms of sleep apnea include:

  • Loud snoring
  • Excessive daytime sleepiness
  • Observed episodes of breathing cessation during sleep
  • Abrupt awakenings accompanied by shortness or breath
  • Morning headache
  • Difficulty staying asleep

If your snoring is loud enough to disturb your sleep or the sleep of others; you have shortness of breath that awakens you from sleep; there are intermittent pauses in your breathing during sleep; or if you experience excessive daytime drowsiness, which is causing you to fall asleep during work or while you're watching TV or driving, it's time to see your doctor.

Finding Relief

After evaluating your symptoms, your doctor may refer you to a sleep disorder specialist, who will probably recommend overnight monitoring in a sleep center to observe your breathing during sleep. For mild cases of sleep apnea, making some lifestyle changes, such as losing weight or quitting smoki...

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