How Sleep Apnea Affects a Human Body?

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Sleep apnea is a disorder in which your breathing stops and starts periodically while you sleep. Your body awakens you up to resume breathing when this happens. You won't be able to sleep effectively as a result of these multiple sleep disturbances, and you'll be especially exhausted during the day.

Sleep apnea, on the other hand, does more than just make you tired. It can lead to diabetes, heart disease, and other long-term health problems if left untreated. When your airway becomes obstructed or collapses during the night, you have sleep apnea. You may snore loudly each time your breathing resumes, waking both you and your sleeping companion.

Obesity and high blood pressure are two health issues associated to sleep apnea. These diseases, when combined with a lack of sleep, can affect a variety of body systems. Once you are suffering from this visit a sleep clinic.

  • The Respiratory System

Sleep apnea can exacerbate chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma symptoms by denying your body of oxygen while you sleep (COPD). You may feel out of breath or have more difficulty exercising than normal.

  • The Endocrine System

Insulin resistance, a disorder in which cells do not respond as well to the hormone insulin, is more common in people who have sleep apnea. When your cells don't take in enough insulin, your blood sugar levels rise, and type 2 diabetes develops.

Sleep apnea has also been linked to metabolic syndrome, a group of heart disease risk factors that includes high blood pressure, high LDL cholesterol, high blood sugar, and a waist circumference that is higher than normal.

  • Digestion System

You're more likely to have liver scarring, fatty liver disease, and higher-than-normal levels of liver enzymes if you have sleep apnea. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and heartburn symptoms can be exacerbated by apnea, further disrupting your sleep.

  • The Cardiovascular System

Obesity and high blood pressure have been related to sleep apnea, both of which put a load on your heart. If you have apnea, you're more likely to have an abnormal heart rhythm like atrial fibrillation, which can put you at risk for stroke. People with sleep apnea are also more likely to develop heart failure.

  • Nervous System

A disturbance in the brain's impulses that allow you to breathe causes one type of sleep apnea, known as central sleep apnea. This sleep apnea type can also cause tingling and numbness in the hands and feet.

  • Reproduction System

Sleep apnea can make you less interested in having sex. It may cause erectile dysfunction in men and affect their capacity to conceive children.

Other symptoms

  • Other typical sleep apnea symptoms include:

  • Morning dry mouth or sore throat

  • Headache

  • Difficulty in paying attention

  • Irritability

See us here at OKOA. Our sleep clinic will guide you through the way of recovering from sleep apnea.

**Disclaimer: The information on this page is not intended to be a doctor's advice, nor does it create any form of patient-doctor relationship.