Sleep Disorders Treatment
Treatments vary and depend on the specific sleep disorder. In general, treatment often involves maintaining a fit and healthy lifestyle, a regular sleep schedule and, sometimes, medication. In more severe instances, treatment may require on-going therapy or even surgery.
Taking Care of Insomnia and Related Sleep Disorders
For many patients suffering from insomnia, changing sleep habits – such as keeping the same bedtime and waking time – can be enough to improve quality sleep and increase daytime alertness. If those measures do not work, your WellStar physician may prescribe behavioral therapies to teach you new sleep methods and improve your sleep environment. These may include:
- Optimizing sleep hygiene (keeping a regular sleep/wake schedule, avoiding alcohol & eating late at night, quitting smoking, avoiding reading or watching TV in bed)
- Relaxation techniques, such as progressive muscle relaxation or breathing exercises designed to reduce tension and heart rate and control breathing and mood.
- Cognitive therapy, which replaces worries about sleep with positive thinking.
- Stimulus control, where you limit the time awake in bed so you only associate the bed and bedroom with sleep or intimate relations.
- Sleep restriction, a treatment that decreases your time in bed and makes you more tired for the following night, creating a temporary sleep deprivation. As sleep improves, the time in bed is gradually increased.
- Light therapy, which uses natural or artificial light to affect your internal clock and control when you need to go to sleep and when you need to wake.
Ongoing Care for Insomnia
For most cases of insomnia, making changes to your lifestyle and improving your sleep habits go a long way to reducing symptoms of sleeplessness. Such changes may include:
- Sticking to a sleep schedule by making your bedtime and wake time consistent, even on the weekends
- Finding ways to relax and reduce stress, such as a warm bath before bed or a soothing bedtime ritual, such as reading, listening to music, yoga, prayer or breathing exercises
- Maintaining a sleep environment, such as reserving the bedroom only for sleeping or intimate relations, keeping the bedroom cooler and dark during sleep and creating subtle background noises
- Avoiding or limiting naps
- Avoiding nicotine, caffeine, alcohol and certain medications
- Maintaining a healthy diet and exercise
Keep track of your questions, and never be afraid to ask your WellStar sleep specialist for clarification regarding your condition or your treatment.
Taking Care of Insomnia and Related Sleep Disorders with Medication
Your WellStar physician may also prescribe various sleeping pills, such as zolpidem (Ambien®), eszopiclone (Lunesta®), zaleplon (Sonata®) or ramelteon (Rozerem®), but usually for no more than a few weeks or months. When insomnia is diagnosed along with depression, your doctor may prescribe an antidepressant with a sedative effect, such as trazodone (Desyrel®), doxepin (Sinequan®, Adapin®) or mirtazapine (Remeron®).
Several over-the-counter medications may induce drowsiness. However, they contain antihistamines, which may reduce the quality of your sleep and may cause side effects such as daytime sleepiness, dry mouth and blurred vision.
Taking Care of Obstructive Sleep Apnea
For milder cases, your WellStar physician may recommend lifestyle changes, such as losing weight or quitting smoking. If symptoms do not improve, or, if your apnea is severe, your doctor may suggest a variety of therapies, including:
- Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP): This is a machine that delivers pressurized air through a mask placed over your nose or whole face while you sleep. The pressurized air ensures that the upper airway passages remain open, preventing apnea and snoring.
- Additional airway pressure devices: For patients who find CPAP too uncomfortable or who fail to respond fully to CPAP, the WellStar sleep specialists may recommend a different device that automatically adjusts the pressure during the 2 phases of the breathing cycle. For example, a bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP®) machine provides more pressure when you inhale and less when you exhale. Other patients may respond well to auto-CPAP, where the unit adjusts the pressure during the course of the night based on the variable need to keep the airway open.
- Oral appliances: These devices may or may not be more comfortable than the airway pressure devices but tend to be less effective. They are designed to reposition your jaw and mouth to enable better breathing during sleep. They may be likened to the effect of a “shoe tree” in the mouth
- Surgical options
Taking Care of Obstructive Sleep Apnea with Surgery
If your WellStar sleep specialist recommends surgery, the goal is to remove excess tissue from the nose and throat that may be vibrating or blocking the upper airway passages. Surgeries for obstructive sleep apnea include:
- Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP), involves removal of tissue from the rear of your mouth and top of the throat, as well as the tonsils and adenoids (usually performed by an ENT surgeon)
- Maxillomandibular advancement, involves breaking the jaw bone and repositioning it forward from other face bones. Often done in step treatment with Genioglossus advancement & hyoid myotomy (the front of the chin bone is advance, with stretching of the tongue). This enlarges the space behind the tongue and soft palate to make obstruction less likely. Oro-maxillofacial surgeons usually perform these complex procedures.
- Tracheostomy, a procedure preformed when other treatments have failed or if the apnea is life threatening. In this procedure, the surgeon makes an opening in the neck and inserts a breathing tube directly into the windpipe (trachea). The opening is covered during the day and uncovered at night to allow air to bypass the blocked air passage in the throat.
- Nasal surgery to remove polyps or to straighten the crooked partition between the nostrils (deviated nasal septum).
Taking Care of Central and Complex Sleep Apnea
As with obstructive sleep apnea, your WellStar physician may recommend therapy or more invasive procedures if lifestyle and sleep habit changes do not work for these types of apnea. In addition to CPAP and BiPAP®, your WellStar sleep specialist may prescribe supplemental oxygen or an adaptive servo-ventilation (ASV), an airflow device that learns your normal breathing pattern and, during sleep, normalizes your breathing pattern to prevent apnea.
Ongoing Care for Sleep Apnea
As with other sleep disorders, changes to your lifestyle, diet and sleep habits can significantly reduce the symptoms associated with sleep apnea. In addition, your WellStar sleep specialist may also suggest that you:
- Lose excess weight. Even a slight loss in weight may help constriction in your throat and air passages, and in some cases, your apnea may be cured by a return to a healthy weight.
- Avoid alcohol, tranquilizers and sleeping pills. These relax the muscles in the back of your throat and inhibit breathing during sleep.
- Sleep on your side or abdomen rather than on your back. Sleeping on your back may cause your tongue and soft palate to rest against the back of your throat and block your air passages.
- Keep your nasal passages open at night. Your doctor may suggest a nasal spray to ensure that your nasal passages remain open and do not restrict breathing.
- Keep track of your questions, and never be afraid to ask your WellStar sleep specialist for clarification regarding your condition or your treatment.
- Maintain minimum of annual check up at the CPAP clinic (a function of the sleep specialist office, where patients can get their CPAP units checked & updated regularly). This will improve the long-term success & compliance with CPAP.
Taking Care of Narcolepsy or Severe Daytime Sleepiness
Narcolepsy has no known cure, although medications and lifestyle changes have been found to reduce the symptoms of this disorder. Some medications your WellStar sleep specialist may consider include:
- Stimulants: Drugs designed to stimulate the central nervous system are the primary treatment to help people with narcolepsy stay awake during the day. Armodafinil (Nuvigil®) and Modafinil (Provigil®) tend to be the most common prescriptions because they are not addictive, and are not actually stimulants. These drugs activate the “wake” centers of the brain. Unlike the traditional stimulants, these agents produce fewer highs and lows. But more severe cases of narcolepsy often require true stimulants, such as methylphenidate (Concerta® and Ritalin®) and some amphetamine mixtures, like Adderall. These may be more effective, but they tend to have more side effects, such as nervousness and heart palpitations, and can be addictive.
- Selective serotonin or norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs, SNRIs): These medications suppress REM sleep to help alleviate the symptoms of muscle tone loss (cataplexy), hallucinations and sleep paralysis. They include atomoxetine (Strattera®), fluoxetine (Prozac® and Sarafem®) and venlafaxine (Effexor®).
- Tricyclic antidepressants: These older antidepressants, such as protriptyline (Vivactil®) and imipramine (Tofranil®) help with muscle tone loss (cataplexy) but have side effects such as dry mouth and constipation.
- Sodium oxybate (Xyrem®): Prescribed for severe cataplexy, sodium oxybate improves and stabilizes nighttime sleep, thus reducing daytime drowsiness. Although effective, this medication can have serious side effects such as nausea, bed-wetting and sleepwalking, and in excessive doses can lead to breathing difficulties, coma and death.
Ongoing Care for Narcolepsy
As with other sleep disorders, changes to your lifestyle, diet and sleep habits can significantly reduce the symptoms associated with narcolepsy. In addition, your WellStar sleep specialist may also suggest that you:
- Stick to a sleep schedule by making your bedtime and wake time consistent, even on the weekends
- Take naps. A series of short naps through the day may reduce sleepiness.
- Avoid nicotine and alcohol
- Get regular exercise
- Keep track of your questions, and never be afraid to ask your WellStar sleep specialist for clarification regarding your condition or your treatment.
Taking Care of Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS)
As with other sleep disorders, lifestyle changes, improved sleep habits and diet changes (particularly if you are diagnosed with an iron deficiency) may reduce symptoms of restless legs syndrome. If those methods do not work, your WellStar sleep specialist may recommend medications, such as:
- Parkinson’s disease medication: These medications reduce the amount of motion in your legs by affecting the level of dopamine in your brain. Two drugs designed for Parkinson’s patients – ropinirole (Requip®) and pramipexole (Mirapex®) – are approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat restless legs syndrome. RLS has no connection with Parkinson’s disease.
- Opioid: Narcotic medications have been proven to relieve mild to severe symptoms of restless legs syndrome, but they can be highly addictive. Some common medications include codeine, oxycodone, combinations of oxycodone and acetaminophen (Percocet® and Roxicet®) and combinations of hydrocodone and acetaminophen (Lortab® and Vicodin®).
- Muscle relaxants and sleep medications: These medications, known as benzodiazepines, improve sleep but do not necessarily eliminate leg movement.
- Gabapentin (Neurontin®): This agent is used in some patients with RLS associated with severe renal or diabetic neuropathy.
Taking Care of Parasomnias
In most cases of parasomnias, your WellStar physician will not recommend special medical treatment, but coping measures. If the conditions are associated with stress or a medical condition, your doctor will make recommendations based on the issues leading to the parasomnia.