Scottish Daily Mail

A magnet in the neck that stops you snoring

- By ROGER DOBSON

NOT having treatment for obstructiv­e sleep apnoea (OSA) can increase the risk of severe flu.

Research in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine shows that patients who didn’t use continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) devices were 4.7 times more likely to be hospitalis­ed with flu.

One theory is that sleep deprivatio­n weakens the immune system.

‘Patients with OSA who did not use CPAP appear to have greater rates of hospitalis­ation, despite having a higher levels of influenza vaccinatio­n compared with patients who adhered to treatment,’ say researcher­s from the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Centre in New Hampshire.

MAgNETS are the latest technology to be tested as a treatment for snoring. The pull of two magnets is being used to keep the airways open at night to treat obstructiv­e sleep apnoea (OSA), a condition that affects two million Britons. It causes the airways to narrow during sleep, interrupti­ng breathing.

When we are asleep, the muscles at the back of the throat relax. For most people, this does not cause a problem, but for those with sleep apnoea, the airway becomes so narrow, breathing is blocked for at least ten seconds.

Once the brain realises breathing has stopped, it sends out a signal for the airway muscles to contract again.

This opens the airway and the sufferer normally wakes with a jolt and a snore. In those with severe OSA, sleep can be interrupte­d every few minutes.

Symptoms include loud snoring and gasping noises when asleep, as well as tiredness and irritabili­ty during the day. OSA is most common in men over the age of 40.

Being overweight, drinking alcohol and smoking are also risk factors.

Left untreated, OSA can raise the risk of high blood pressure, and of having a heart attack or a stroke.

STUDIES also show that someone who has been deprived of sleep because of OSA is up to 12 times more likely to be involved in a car accident.

Treatments include lifestyle changes, such as losing excess weight, cutting down on alcohol, sleeping on your side, and using a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) device.

These machines prevent the airway closing by delivering a continuous supply of compressed air through a mask, but although effective, adherence rates are low because many users find the masks uncomforta­ble.

The Magnetic Apnoea Prevention (Magnap) device uses the type of magnet found in computer hard drives and bicycle dynamos to keep the airway open.

The magnets have an erosionpro­of titanium coating and it is claimed that they can be safely left in the body for years, once implanted.

One, the size of a 5p coin, is surgically implanted on the hyoid bone, the U-shaped bone found at the root of the tongue in the neck. The surgery takes around an hour.

Four weeks later, once the inchlong incision has healed, the patient is equipped with a second magnet — contained in fabric that is tied around the neck.

This second magnet is attracted to the one implanted in the neck, creating a gentle pulling force which keeps the airway open.

Different-sized magnets can be used to increase or reduce the attraction depending on the size and shape of the patient’s neck.

Six people have had implants so far. They are part of a U.S. trial of the technology on ten people with mild to severe OSA at Mount Zion University Hospital in San Francisco.

‘Preventing the collapse of the airway passages by using an implanted magnet modulated by an external one may prevent the need for cumbersome external machines,’ says Jaydip Ray, who is a professor of otology and neurotolog­y at the University of Sheffield.

‘The long-term results of the study will be eagerly awaited.’

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