Brain can learn to overcome sleep apnea, scientists find

Feb 01, 2011

New research from the University of Toronto could provide some restful nights for the 18 million North Americans who suffer from obstructive sleep apnea.

In a recent study that appeared in the , scientists from the University demonstrated that repeated obstruction of the airways requires release of the chemical noradrenaline. The release of this chemical helps the brain learn to breathe more effectively and purposefully.

"What we showed is that repeated disruption of normal lung activity – what happens during sleep apnea – triggers a form of learning that helps you breathe better. This type of brain plasticity could be harnessed to help overcome the breathing insufficiency that typifies sleep apnea" says Dr. John Peever, Associate Professor of neuroscience and lead author of the study.

In order to mimic the experience of severe sleep apnea, the scientists induced short 15 second apneas in sedated rats by repeatedly restricting airflow into the lungs. They found repeated apneas caused the brain to progressively trigger more forceful contraction of the respiratory muscles, which caused an increase in breathing. This increase in breathing lasted for over an hour.

Peever says it seems the brain is using the unwanted side-effects of sleep apnea to help it learn to prevent future apneas by increasing the depth of breathing.

This study also pinpointed the that allows this type of plasticity to occur. They found that noradrenaline is required in the case of repeated apneas to cause brain plasticity and enhance breathing.

These findings are important because they suggest that artificial manipulation with common drugs that affect noradrenaline levels in the brain could also help improve breathing in patients suffering from sleep apnea. This work could serve as the potential basis for developing the long sought after pill for sleep apnea.

Explore further: Obstructive sleep apnea associated with less visceral fat accumulation in women than men

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User comments : 7

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SteveL
3.5 / 5 (2) Feb 01, 2011
If obstructive sleep apnea is caused by a blocked airway, how can a drug help the brain to breathe deeper? Obstructive sleep apnea means that you are suffocating (not breathing). Not that you aren't breathing deep enough.
that_guy
1 / 5 (1) Feb 01, 2011
If obstructive sleep apnea is caused by a blocked airway, how can a drug help the brain to breathe deeper? Obstructive sleep apnea means that you are suffocating (not breathing). Not that you aren't breathing deep enough.


so...you don't see the possibility of taking more forceful breaths might help alleviate the issue?

People with sleep apnea do not typically asphyxiate to death, so some air gets through. If you were to take deeper breaths, then more air would get through. I'm not saying whether or not the researchers are correct, but their hypothesis certainly seems plausible.
that_guy
1 / 5 (2) Feb 01, 2011
Come to think of it, a sleep apnea breathing machine increases air pressure into the user's nose and mouth. Taking deeper breaths is the equivalent action, but further decreasing pressure in the lungs, pulling in more air through the nose and mouth.
Neuroshift
1 / 5 (1) Feb 01, 2011
Doesn't sound right to me. First of all, if--as the article claims--the brain naturally learns to make a more forceful contraction in response to apnea events, why does anyone end up with sleep apnea? It should be self-limiting. But sleep apnea is not a matter of the force of contraction, but of the inappropriate relaxation of the throat muscles during sleep, closing the airway. Second, part of the problem in sleep apnea is the repeated awakening that occurs as a result of the breathing difficulty. (People don't usually cease breathing entirely in sleep apnea because they wake up). A more forceful contraction, even if it could indeed restore breathing despite the closed throat, could easily still awaken the person in question. CPAP machines, by the way, force air in from outside, opening the throat. But a stronger pull from the lungs, it seems to me, would merely pull the throat closed more strongly.
ormondotvos
3.7 / 5 (3) Feb 01, 2011
Some sleep apnea is caused by lying on the back, allowing the tongue to fall backwards into the throat as sleep deepens.

A simple trick is to sleep on your side, with your face pointed downward as much as possible, and your chest also turned downward to accentuate the position. If you're doing it right, you'll feel the tongue fall forward.

After practice, the slightest restriction in breathing will cause that corrective downward movement of the face, with very little disruption of sleep.

It's what I do. It works.
satyricon
1 / 5 (1) Feb 02, 2011
I thought Pillar Procedure took care of mild sleep apnea for many patients.
RETT
not rated yet Feb 07, 2011
The reader who commented that the obstruction comes from relaxation of the throat muscles, might easily imagine that noradrenalin might reduce that inappropriate relaxation, reducing the tendency to obstruct.

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