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Sleep Apnea, Stuttering May Be Linked
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- Stuttering and a serious form of snoring
known as sleep apnea may be linked, and both conditions may be
caused by brain damage sustained early in life, US researchers
said on Monday.
A team at the University of California
Los Angeles found that nearly 40% of sleep apnea patients they
studied also stuttered as children.
Sleep apnea is a serious form of
snoring in which a patient's breathing actually stops several
times a night. It is linked with a high rate of heart death.
"For decades, we have blamed sleep
apnea solely on a narrowed airway caused by enlarged tonsils,
a small jaw or excess fat in the throat," Dr. Ronald Harper, a
professor of neurobiology who led the study, said in a statement.
"Our findings show, however, that
sleep apnea patients also suffer disordered wiring in brain regions
that control muscles of the airway. These glitches may lead to
the syndrome."
Writing in the American Journal
of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Harper and his colleagues
said they used magnetic resonance imaging to compare the brains
of 21 men diagnosed with sleep apnea with 21 men free of the disorder.
The MRIs revealed a dramatic loss
of gray matter--brain cells--in the men with sleep apnea. The
worst-hit areas were those involved in speech production, movement
and emotion.
The amount of brain damage correlated
directly to the severity of sleep apnea. The healthy men's brains
were 2% to 18% larger in these areas than the men with sleep apnea.
"We propose that early damage to
the brain's speech center triggers problems in the muscles that
control the airway. This, in turn, eventually leads to sleep apnea,"
said Dr. Paul Macey, who also worked on the study.
"Because the sleep apnea patients
possessed speech impairments from childhood and their brain's
speech center revealed significant gray matter loss, this brain
damage likely originated early in life."
The researchers said 38% of the
sleep apnea patients reported a history of stuttering or speech
impairment. Overall, 7% of the general population stutters.
"Speech impediments may prove an
important diagnostic clue for assessing and treating sleep apnea,"
Macey added. "In the future, doctors may monitor certain brain
structures and examine children for speech or movement problems
that may predict a higher sleep apnea risk."
Reference
Source 89
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