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Underlying conditions often trigger central sleep apnea

- Mayo Clinic — Timothy Morgenthal­er, M.D., Center for Sleep Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota Mayo Clinic Q&A is an educationa­l resource and doesn’t replace regular medical care. Email a question to MayoClinic­Q&A@ mayo.edu

Q: I am a 47-year-old man, in good health and not overweight, but I was just diagnosed with sleep apnea. What could be causing my sleep apnea? I’m using a CPAP machine, but it’s not helping much. Is there something else I can try?

A: There are two forms of sleep apnea: obstructiv­e and central. Obstructiv­e sleep apnea often develops as a result of being overweight, but central sleep apnea is not related to weight. Instead, it develops when the brain doesn’t send proper signals to the muscles that control breathing. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) devices don’t always work for people with central sleep apnea. But other treatment options are available.

Sleep apnea is a disorder in which breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep. About 85% of people with this disorder have obstructiv­e sleep apnea. It occurs when the throat muscles relax and block the airway during sleep. Being overweight is strongly associated with obstructiv­e sleep apnea. However, while twothirds of patients with obstructiv­e sleep apnea are obese, up to one-third are not. The tendency of the upper airway to collapse during sleep is influenced by many things, including the skeletal configurat­ion of the face and neck, muscle function, and even medication­s or alcohol.

The other 15% of people with sleep apnea have central sleep apnea, in which your brain fails to send signals to your breathing muscles. Although the condition is related to brain signals, the cause of central sleep

apnea usually doesn’t originate in the brain. It’s often triggered by another underlying medical condition or by taking certain medication­s.

Central sleep apnea can be caused by heart disease, congestive heart failure, stroke or advanced kidney disease. The medication­s most often associated with central sleep apnea are opioids, such as morphine, oxycodone or codeine. In some people, no specific cause can be identified. This is known as idiopathic, or primary, central sleep apnea.

A CPAP device usually is the first treatment used for sleep apnea. It involves wearing a mask over your nose and/or mouth, while you sleep. The mask is attached to a pump that supplies pressurize­d air to hold open the upper airway.

For many people with central sleep apnea, however, airway closure isn’t the problem. Another device, called an “adaptive servo ventilator,” may be more useful. It also delivers pressurize­d air, but it adjusts the amount of pressure as you inhale each breath to normalize your breathing pattern.

The drawback to an adaptive servo ventilator is that for people who have

heart problems, the device may not be safe to use.

Another treatment called “transvenou­s phrenic nerve stimulatio­n” may be a better choice for people with heart problems. It involves a device implanted in the chest that acts like a pacemaker to help you breathe normally during sleep by stimulatin­g the phrenic nerve — the nerve that runs from the brain to the diaphragm. This device monitors your breathing and prompts the phrenic nerve to generate a breath if you’ve gone too long without breathing during sleep.

It’s important to distinguis­h between obstructiv­e sleep apnea and central sleep apnea, and the only way to tell the difference between the two is with a sleep study. Talk with your health care provider about undergoing a sleep study. From there, you and your care team can develop a treatment plan.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? About 15% of people with sleep apnea have central sleep apnea, which a CPAP device does not treat as effectivel­y.
DREAMSTIME About 15% of people with sleep apnea have central sleep apnea, which a CPAP device does not treat as effectivel­y.

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