Bedwetting, being overweight linked to sleep apnea
July 4, 2009 on 12:00 pm | In Uncategorized |Children who are overweight and wet the bed at night may have obstructive sleep apnea , researchers report.
In a “case-control” study, Dr. Joseph G. Barone, of Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, and colleagues performed overnight sleep studies in 149 children between the ages of 5 and 15 with OSA, and 139 matched control children.
Both being overweight and wetting the bed are associated with the nighttime breathing disorder, they found. However, overweight and bedwetting are not associated with each other.
According to Barone and colleagues, there was a significant association between both bedwetting and overweight and OSA.
They combined that data with information from medical records, including age, gender, height, weight, frequency of bedwetting, history of snoring, diabetes, nasal allergies, and/or enlarged tonsils.
Barones team suggests that doctors consider OSA in overweight children who wet the bed, especially when they display other symptoms of OSA or fail to respond to standard bedwetting treatment programs.
Bedwetting raised the likelihood of OSA more than fivefold and being overweight raised the likelihood of OSA more than fourfold. However, their associations are independent of each other, the researchers note.
SOURCE: Pediatrics, July 2009.
Health
No Comments yet »
RSS feed for comments on this post.
Leave a comment
Powered by WordPress with Pool theme design by Borja Fernandez. Packaged by Edublogs - education blogs.
Entries and comments feeds.
Valid XHTML and CSS. ^Top^