Quote:
Originally Posted by kathrynk
Shannon- Both my father and his dad have sleep apnea and use a CPAP. I have thought about this a lot. My dad isn't even sort of overweight (Army Ranger), and grandpa is just a little bit (maybe 15-20 pounds). I go to the doctor in two weeks and will ask about this, for sure. Looking at the list of symptoms, it looks like I have quite a few of them
Interesting...You know, I always thought sleep apnea was what middle aged fat guys with no neck have, or the super-obese like me. But I found out from my sleep doc and from a site I belong to that is really just not the case. And there are millions of people undiagnosed, from what they say, because if people don't fit that criteria, they just assume that must not be what they have.
There are several people on that site that have lost a ton of weight just having the CPAP, and it's been my experience that I still have to do all the work toward weight loss, but it is just DOABLE now, because I am not fighting that constant exhaustion and unbearable food cravings. I was feeling really bad when my stepmom said something to the effect that "oh, too bad you couldn't just lose weight and you have to sleep with a CPAP now". I posted that on the site, and lots of people replied that they believe the sleep apnea is WHY they were so overweight. My doctor told me that because of my jaw anatomy, I would likely still need the CPAP if I lose a lot of weight, just the pressure may go down. We shall see.
I saw a thing on 60 minutes a couple years ago where they sleep deprived people. They had a bunch of healthy-weight people come to this place for a week, they only let them have 4 hours of sleep per night, and by the end of the week most of them were eating almost double their calories, all of it pizza, burgers, etc. Several of the people had blood sugars out of whack to the point of pre-diabetes levels -- just from one week without adequate sleep. Also, I worked night shift for many years (talk about sleep-deprived!), and it was SO weird to me that at least half of the 20-something, normal-weight girls who got pregnant had gestational diabetes. So that's a message to everyone, whether you have a sleep problem or not -- get your sleep!
Sorry for the public service announcement, but obviously I feel passionate about this. For the first time in my adult life I KNOW sustainable weight loss is possible, it's just a matter of time. My house is clean, my finances are in perfect order, my relationships with my daughter and husband have improved 10-fold, and I've only been sleeping great for 4 months. kathryn, don't be afraid of this diagnosis if you get one, getting it treated is a MIRACLE!!!!