Seeking sleep

Center is a resource for patients with apnea, insomnia and other sleep disorders

sleep

Triathlete Robert Upchurch learned how to manage his obstructive sleep apnea in a class at the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center.

For some people suffering from obstructive sleep apnea, the remedy feels every bit as troublesome as the disorder. That's how Robert Upchurch felt until he took advantage of a new class at the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center in Redwood City.

Upchurch, 48, who trains aircraft mechanics for United Airlines, was diagnosed with obstruc-tive sleep apnea last August after an overnight evaluation at the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center. Although the Hawaiian-born triathlete worked out almost every day, he had high blood pressure and was overweight. Both are common symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea, which stresses the heart and can slow down the body's metabolism, leading to weight gain.

"I had forgotten what it was like to wake up rested," he said. "I was always exhausted. I walked around tense as a rock. But for me, that was normal. At my evaluation at the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center, I woke up in the morning and told the doctors that I had slept well. They said, 'No, you didn't.'"

More than 12 million Americans suffer from this potentially fatal condition, which occurs when the muscles in the back of the throat relax during sleep, narrowing or completely collapsing the airway. (Apnea, a Greek word, means "without breath.") When the brain senses that it's not getting enough oxygen, it briefly wakes the person up. This pattern, which may repeat hundreds of times each night, leads to shallow sleep, daytime sleepiness or fatigue, and cognitive dysfunction. It also increases the risk of heart-related disease such as high blood pressure, heart attack, arrhythmias, heart failure and stroke.

Mechanical adjustments

Upchurch was set up with a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine, which blows air into the upper respiratory tract through the nose to keep the airway open. But he found it uncomfortable. The air pressure felt too high, he said. He would wake up with a sore stomach and dry mouth. So he stopped using it.

Several months later, he received a notice in the mail about a new, monthly CPAP class to help Sleep Medicine Center patients adjust to their machines. "CPAP has always been the gold standard for treatment of obstructive sleep apnea, but adherence to the treatment varies from 20 to 80 percent, depending on the study," said Michelle Cao, DO, a Stanford Hospital pulmonologist and sleep expert who leads the class. "My goal was to try to help people solve their problems. I call it a CPAP boot camp."

Upchurch went to a class in April, along with some 20 other participants. "Everyone had a different question, but we were all learning from each other," he said.

sleep

Sleep expert Clete Kushida, MD, PhD, explains how the portable polysomnograph works. Medical assistant Jennifer Harpe, modeling the device, said, "Once all this stuff is on, you don't really feel it."

Cao lowered the airflow pressure on his machine and refitted his face mask, which looks a little like the oxygen mask that a professional football player uses on the sidelines. She also showed him how to use the machine's humidifier to help prevent his mouth from drying out.

"Going to that class made a huge difference," Upchurch said. "Now I'm getting a much deeper sleep. I feel more energetic, and my upper body feels more limber and relaxed."

Upchurch said he also has benefitted from the guidance he received at the center on adjusting his diet and his sleep schedule to help ensure better rest. In May, he ran the Bay to Breakers, a 12-kilometer (7.5 miles) race in San Francisco, and felt so energized afterward that he went to a nearby hotel pool to swim laps. Now he is preparing for the San Francisco Marathon on July 31.

Resource for sleep studies

The Stanford Sleep Medicine Center offers a variety of other treatments for obstructive sleep apnea, including surgery to reduce anatomical obstruction in the nose, throat and/or tongue, and education about behavioral measures to alleviate the disorder, such as a change in sleeping position and weight loss.

Established in 1972, the center, widely recognized as the birthplace of sleep medicine, treats both adults and children. Its faculty comprises some of the foremost medical experts on obstruc-tive sleep apnea-a term coined by the center's Christian Guilleminault, MD-as well as other sleep apneas, insomnia, restless legs syndrome, narcolepsy, idiopathic hypersomnia (disabling daytime sleepiness), and parasomnias, such as teeth-grinding and sleepwalking.

"Many of the pioneering discoveries in sleep medicine and basic sleep research were made by Stanford's team of internationally recognized scientists," noted Clete Kushida, MD, PhD, the center's medical director.

When Upchurch went for his sleep study, he spent the night in one of the center's 18 private rooms with state-of-the-art monitoring equipment and soundproofing. Before going to sleep, he was attached to a polysomnograph, which measures physiological functions, including brain activity, eye movements, heart rhythm, breathing and muscle activity.

The center is increasing the number of portable, or ambulatory, monitoring devices it makes available to patients, allowing sleep studies to be conducted at home. The technology in these devices has improved tremendously over the past several years, Kushida said, making them almost as accurate as the larger versions in the Sleep Medicine Center. They are best suited for patients with a high probability of having obstructive sleep apnea, as well as for patients who need to spend the night in their own bed for reasons of comfort or health.

Treating insomnia

Insomnia is the most common sleep disorder, affecting 10 to 14 percent of Americans. It most commonly begins during periods of stress related to work or family, but it can also emerge as a symptom of depression, anxiety, dementia or physical conditions, such as abnormal thyroid function, asthma or chronic pain. Regardless of how it begins, when the problem persists, it should be treated. Many people turn to prescription sleep medication, which often helps but also can lead to drug dependence or tolerance.

But studies have shown that cognitive behavioral therapy is as effective as sleep medication in the short run and much more effective in the long run. The Stanford Sleep Medicine Center has been at the forefront of the nonpharmacological treatment of insomnia, and it has the only Bay Area program-and one of the few such programs nationwide-devoted to cognitive behav-ioral therapy for sleeplessness.

The therapy equips patients with a set of mental tools to help them overcome their insomnia. "I think by and large, most people don't know that this exists as an option, but it is incredibly effective," said Rachel Manber, PhD, who has run the program for more than a decade. She is leading a national initiative to train psychologists in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System in cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia.

The therapy helps patients establish their bed as a cue for sleep and weaken it as a cue for wakefulness. It also teaches them strategies for reducing thoughts and worries that interfere with sleep.

"It's gratifying for me to see people get better," Manber said. "And they get better quickly."

About Stanford Medicine

Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.

2023 ISSUE 3

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