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Sleep Apnea Surgery

 
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Definition of Sleep Apnea Surgery

Apnea (stopping breathing for at least 10 seconds) which occurs during sleep may require surgical intervention as treatment.

Description of Sleep Apnea Surgery

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a condition in which breathing is blocked by closure or collapse of the tissues in the throat so that no air flows through the sleeper's nose or mouth, despite his efforts to breathe.

Central sleep apnea occurs when the movement of the diaphragm (the muscle separating the chest from the abdomen) is temporarily stopped. This type of apnea is usually associated with some abnormality within the central nervous system that controls breathing.

Over 90 percent of all sleep apneas are associated with upper airway obstruction; central respiratory failure without upper airway obstruction accounts for relatively few apneas.

The severity of OSA is measured by an Apnea Index (also known as the Respiratory Disturbance Index). This represents the number of times a patient stops breathing for more than 10 seconds in each hour of sleep during a test. If a patient slept for six hours and had 180 apneas, this results in an Apnea Index of 30 (180 divided by 6 = 30).

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Questions To Ask Your Doctor About Sleep Apnea Surgery

What type of surgery do you recommend?

Do you perform the LUPP surgery?

What deformities or tissue will be removed or corrected?

How long will the surgery take?

How successful is this type of surgery?

What are the complications of this surgery?

How many of these procedures have you performed?

What can be expected after the surgery?






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