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Archive for the 'Apnea in Children' Category

Tools sheds light on snoring, cognitive deficits in children

About two-thirds of children with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) — snoring or obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) — have some degree of cognitive deficit, but the severity of the cognitive deficit has been notoriously difficult to correlate to the severity of the sleep-disordered breathing, suggesting that other important issues may be at play, or that the right factors were simply not being measured.

A that will be published in the first issue for November, 2008 issue of the ’s opens the door to understanding the complex relationship between sleep, breathing and brain function in a whole new way.

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Tonsils and apnea may be problem in children, not attention deficit disorder

It’s often labeled attention deficit disorder, but experts say what may be the real problem behind thousands of children’s behavior problems could actually be sleep apnea.

According to ear, nose and throat physicians, enlarged tonsils can cause obstructive sleep apnea in children causing them to stop breathing repeatedly during the night resulting in sleep deprivation.

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Obstructive sleep apnea is health factor from childhood: study

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in very young children may cause some of the adverse cardiovascular health consequences seen in older children and adults with the condition, according to Israeli-based researchers, who presented their findings this morning at the ’s in Toronto.

"OSA starts from the first year of life," said , the pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist who led the study at ’s , located in Beersheba, Israel, "yet very little is known regarding the cognitive, cardiovascular and other medical consequences."

The study is the first to look at the relationship between systemic inflammation and cardiovascular morbidity in children with OSA. Researchers assessed 70 young children, ages 12 to 26 months, whose OSA was confirmed by polysomnography. The children were scheduled to undergo adenotonsillectomy (T&A) to remove enlarged tonsils and adenoids.

On the morning of their surgery, the children were tested to determine levels of (), a and (), a marker for inflammation.

Compared to matched controls, 46 children with OSA had significantly higher levels of NTproBNP and of CRP. Three months after surgery, 20 children were evaluated. The average levels of NTproBNP and CRP dropped below that of the control group.

"Increased levels of CRP in children with OSA may require cardiovascular assessment," said Goldbart. "Further studies are needed first to determine the need to diagnose and treat OSA at a very young age."

He and his colleagues plan to conduct a follow-up study to determine if abnormal cardiovascular function in these children puts them at greater risk for cardiovascular morbidity as adults.

The team’s research was funded by the .

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