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    7
    Sep
    2012
    6:15pm, EDT

    Half of women may have sleep apnea, says Swedish study

    By Kerry Grens, Reuters

    NEW YORK - Fully half of the 400 women given overnight sleep tests in a new Swedish study turned out to have mild-to-severe sleep apnea.

    In the random population sample of adult women who answered a questionnaire and were monitored while sleeping, half experienced at least five episodes an hour when they stopped breathing for longer than 10 seconds, the minimum definition of sleep apnea.

    Among women with hypertension or who were obese - two risk factors for sleep apnea - the numbers were even higher, reaching 80 to 84 percent of women.

    Many of the women in the study represent mild cases of sleep apnea.

    "How important is the mild sleep apnea, we don't know," said Dr. Karl Franklin, the lead author of the study and a professor at Umea University in Sweden.

    Terry Young, a professor in the School of Medicine and Public Health at the University of Wisconsin, said mild sleep apnea is important to pay attention to.

    "We see that it doesn't go away and it gets worse," she said.

    Sleep apnea is tied to a higher risk of stroke, heart attack and early death.

    One recent study also found that women who have sleep apnea are more likely to develop memory problems and dementia (see Reuters Health story of August 9, 2011).

    Franklin said his group wanted to get updated evidence of how common the condition is.

    The researchers selected 400 women between the ages of 20 and 70 from a larger population sample of 10,000, and asked them to sleep overnight at home with sensors attached to their bodies.

    The sensors measured heart rate, eye and leg movements, blood oxygen levels, air flow and brain waves.

    Each apnea event was defined by at a least a 10-second pause in breathing accompanied by a drop in blood oxygen levels.

    Women who had an average of five or more of these events during each hour of sleep were considered to have sleep apnea.

    The study, which was funded by the Swedish Heart Lung Foundation, found that apnea became more common in the older age groups.

    Among women aged 20-44, one quarter had sleep apnea, compared to 56 percent of women aged 45-54 and 75 percent of women aged 55-70.

    Young said these numbers are higher than her own estimate, but that's likely because she used a more strict definition of sleep apnea than Franklin's group.

    Franklin also said his equipment, being newer, is more sensitive in detecting interruptions in breathing.

    Severe sleep apnea, which involves more than 30 breathing disruptions per hour, was far less common.

    Just 4.6 percent of women 45-54 and 14 percent of women 55-70 had severe cases.

    Among women of all ages with hypertension, 14 percent had severe sleep apnea, and among women who were obese, 19 percent had severe apnea.

    Franklin said that if physicians are looking for sleep apnea among women, examining those who are obese, over 55 or have hypertension is a good place to start.

    Young said sleep apnea is often thought of as a condition of men, but identifying women with it is especially beneficial, because her research has shown that women are good at sticking with treatment.

    "The prejudice of excluding women (as potentially having sleep apnea) has been rampant for a long time. It's gotten better, however, and the (public health) gain in identifying women with sleep apnea is great," she said.

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  • 22
    May
    2012
    7:41pm, EDT

    Breathing problems during sleep linked with cancer

    Spanish researchers who followed 5,200 cancer-free patients with sleep apnea found that those with severe sleep apnea had a 68 percent increased risk of developing cancer of any kind. NBC's Dr. Nancy Snyderman reports.

    By MyHealthNewsDaily staff

    People with sleep apnea — disordered breathing while they slumber — are more likely to develop cancer or to die from it than people with no breathing problems, two new studies suggest.

    Those who had severe sleep apnea were found to be nearly five times more likely to die from cancer over the 22-year period of one of the studies.

    In the other study, people with apnea had an increased risk of developing any type of cancer, and those with the most severe apnea had the greatest risk.

    The new findings seem to agree with studies in animals that show tumor growth is promoted by an inadequate supply of oxygen.

    The studies found only an association — they do not suggest sleep apnea causes cancer or contributes to its growth, the researchers said. But if future studies confirm the results, diagnosis and treatment of sleep apnea in patients with cancer might prolong their survival, said study researcher F. Javier Nieto, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health.

    The studies were presented this week at an American Thoracic Society meeting in San Francisco.

    Previous studies have linked sleep apnea with increased risks of high blood pressure, heart disease, depression, and early death from any cause. The condition is characterized by pauses in breathing or shallow breathes during sleep, according to the National Institutes of Health. Such pauses can last for seconds to minutes, and often occur five to 30 times or more an hour. At least 1 in 10 people older than 65 has sleep apnea, the NIH says.

    In the study of cancer mortality rates, Nieto and colleagues analyzed information from 1,522 Wisconsin residents who enrolled in a sleep study in 1989. Every four years, the participants underwent a polysomnography test — an all-night recording of their sleep and breathing — along with other medical tests.

    The worse the participants' sleep apnea was, the more likely they were to die from cancer during the 22-year study period, the researchers said. Participants with severe sleep apnea were 4.8 times more likely to die than those with sleep breathing problems. The link was stronger among non-obese people than obese people.

    The results held even after the researchers took into account factors that could affect a person's risk of death from cancer, including age, sex, body mass index (BMI) and smoking.

    In the other study, researchers in Spain gathered data on 5,246 patients who were diagnosed with sleep apnea in seven Spanish hospitals between 2000 and 2007, and found that 5.7 percent of them developed some type of cancer during the study period.

    In a separate study, also presented at the meeting, researchers from Spain found that the link between an inadequate supply of oxygen and increased cancer growth was stronger in lean mice than in obese mice.

    More from MyHealthNewsDaily:

    • Top 10 Spooky Sleep Disorders
    • 10 Do's and Don'ts to Reduce Your Risk of Cancer
    • 5 Experts Answer: Is Lack of Sleep Bad for Health?

    More from msnbc.com:

    • Sleepwalking more rampant than thought
    • Donna Summer's death puts spotlight on lung cancer risks
    • One-third of US workers don't get enough sleep

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