Sleep Apnea Treatment for Men Lindenhurst NY

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sleep Apnea Treatment for Men. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sleep Apnea Treatment for Men, including "Sleep Apnea: Danger Zone for Men". 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 Lindenhurst, NY that will answer all of your questions about Sleep Apnea Treatment for Men.

Good Samaritan Hospital Sleep Apnea Center
(631) 376-4299
1000 Montauk Highway
West Islip, NY
The Center for Sleep Medicine at St. Joseph Hospital
(516) 520-2521
4295 Hempstead Turnpike
Bethpage, NY
Ultimate Health Sleep Disorders Center
(516) 437-7236
125 Kennedy Drive
Hauppauge, NY
Stony Brook University Medical Center Sleep Disorders Center
(631) 444-2500
240 Middle Country Road
Smithtown, NY
United Sleep Diagnostics Inc.
(516) 873-6500
50 Rose Place
Garden City Park, NY
HealthBridge Sleep Medicine
(516) 627-7407
1165 Northern Boulevard
Manhasset, NY
Huntington Medical Group Sleep Disorders Center
(631) 425-3895
180 E. Pulaski Road
Huntington Station, NY
The Long Island Sleep Center/Louis Saffran Physician PLLC
(516) 536-8151
30 Hempstead Avenue
Rockville Centre, NY
Sleep Solutions of New York
(631) 724-4729
257 Middle Country Road
Smithtown, NY
Ultimate Health Sleep Disorders Center
(516) 437-7236
2343 New Hyde Park Road
New Hyde Park, NY

Sleep Apnea: Danger Zone for Men

According to a recent study funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (an arm of the National Institutes of Health) men with sleep apnea, a sleep disorder, have a 58 percent higher risk of developing heart failure than those without it.

The Study

The study followed 4,000 subjects for a nine year period and also found that men (ages 40 to 70) with severe sleep apnea had a 68 percent higher risk of developing coronary heart disease than those without it.

Sleep apnea is a disorder in which breathing actually stops in intervals that can last from 10 seconds to a minute or longer. An unpleasant snoring noise can be heard when the body responds by sending air forcefully through it as breathing resumes. More common in adult men than women (24 percent compared with 9 percent), sleep apnea is a highly treatable condition.

 Sleep Apnea

When breathing stops during sleep, the lack of oxygen sends the body into a type of panic raising blood pressure, stressing the heart, and pouring sugar into the blood. This S.O.S reaction gets the breathing going again but often causes an unnoticeable arousal from sleep.

Another problem caused by the condition is the body doesn't experience the deeper stages of sleep and the sufferer feels tired the next day. He may also have morning headaches caused by the decreased oxygen.

If your spouse complains that you snore or snort frequently; if you fall asleep often during the day or nod off while driving, you may have the condition and should be evaluated by a physician board certified in sleep medicine. It could save your life.

Who Is Most Prone to Sleep Apnea?

About 70 percent of sleep apnea patients are obese. Added fat in the upper airway is the likely culprit. Sleep apnea is also more common in those with diabetes and high blood pressure. Here, other risk factors.

  • Being overweight or over the age of 40
  • Having a large neck size (17 inches or greater in men and 16 inches or more in women)
  • Having large tonsils
  • Having gastroesophageal reflux
  • Nasal obstruction due to a deviated septum, allergies, or sinus problems
  • Recessed chin
  • Family history of sleep apnea

Treatment Options Are Effective

Sleep apnea is a very treatable condition, according to Daniel J. Gottlieb, M.D., M.P.H., "and it appears that treatment may prevent the adverse health consequences of the condition including heart disease, heart attack, stroke and congestive heart failure."

CPAP

The most common treatment, called continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), uses a machine that forces air through a breathing mask and into the airways to prevent breathing interruptions. According to New York City-based sleep specialist Gerald Suh, MD, "weight loss may be recommended as well as an oral appliance or surgery -either a nasal or throat-procedure," Suh explains. "A visit to a sleep clinic may not be necessary but having a physician trained in sleep medicine to treat and manage the sleep apnea is high...

Click here to read more from Quality Health