SLEEP APNEA TREATMENT MAY REVERSE MEMORY PROBLEMS
SLEEP DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES
Monday, December 11, 2006
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
The results of a preliminary study suggest that memory deficits that are common among people with
sleep apnea can improve when they are treated with positive airway pressure.
Sleep apnea occurs when breathing passages become obstructed during sleep, often when soft
tissues around the larynx and throat collapse inward. Breathing can be interrupted temporarily but
frequently, often accompanied by snoring. A proven treatment is a face or nose mask connected to
a machine that delivers continuous pressurized air to keep the airways open during sleep.
Dr. Molly E. Zimmerman at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, New York, and her
associates screened 179 people diagnosed with sleep apnea, and identified 58 with measurable
memory impairments.
All 58 subjects were prescribed treatment with a positive airway pressure (PAP) device, with an
internal microprocessor to monitor compliance. The results are reported in the December issue of
the medical journal Chest.
After 3 months of treatment, the investigators classified subjects according to treatment adherence:
14 used positive airway pressure on average of less than 2 hours per night (poor users); 25 who
used PAP 2 to 6 hours per night (moderate users); and 19 who used the device more than 6 hours
per night (optimal users).
Zimmerman’s team found that 21 percent of poor users, 44 percent of moderate users, and 68
percent of optimal users achieved normal memory performance after 3 months.
“The information obtained from these results could be used as a potential motivator for sleep
apnea patients struggling with poor positive airway pressure adherence,” the investigators suggest.
SOURCE: Chest, December, 2006.
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