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by C.A. Wolski Sleep Scores a Touchdown A recent study involving 300 NFL players raises public awareness about sleep apnea and could have significant implications on the way sleep apnea is looked at and the number of people affected by it. Sleep apnea may not be just for the old and unfit anymore. A recent study of 300 National Football League (NFL) players found that 14% of them had sleep apneafive times higher than noted in previous studies of similarly aged adults. In addition, the study found that in higher risk players, the prevalence of sleep apnea was 34%. The results of the studysponsored by ResMed Sleep Disordered Breathing Foundation, a charitable foundation funded by ResMed, the National Sleep Foundation, and Medcarewere published in the January 23, 2003, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. The study was directed by SleepTech Consulting Group, LLC. Results of the Study Though the results could have significant implications in the way sleep apnea is looked at and the number of people affected by it, for Peter Farrell, PhD, biomedical engineer and CEO of ResMed, the scope of the problem is old news. He cites a decade-old editorial published in the New England Journal of Medicine in response to an epidemiologic study of the prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea. It called sleep apnea a public health problem akin in scope to tobacco smoking. That was 10 years ago. How far have we come? The answer is, unfortunately, not that far, he says. How It Got Started The study was conducted during the summer of 2002 and was made up of 300 players from eight randomly selected NFL teams, including the Chicago Bears, Jacksonville Jaguars, New England Patriots, New York Giants, Philadelphia Eagles, St Louis Rams, Tennessee Titans, and Washington Redskins. The recent study followed a 1997 pilot SleepTech study with 16 linemen from the New York Giants. In that study, 13 of the 16 players tested positive for sleep apnea. The players in the 2002 study were divided into high-risk and low-risk categories based on neck size and body mass index. Team physicians assisted with the evaluations, which included 52 overnight polysomnographic studies that were conducted in each teams home city. The study indicated that offensive and defensive linemen accounted for 85% of the positive cases of sleep apnea among the participants, with 34% of the high-risk players showing a prevalence for sleep-disordered breathing. While the study was designed to simply measure the prevalence of sleep apnea in NFL players, the results of the athletes tests were turned over to their team physicians. Proposed future phases of the study will include measuring performance in players with and without sleep apnea and determining the effects of treatment on performance and injuries. Current Study The fact that NFL players took part in the test and may publicly admit they have sleep apnea is a benefit of the study and could help raise public awareness about the problem. The bigger challenge, however, is to get the message to physicians. Physician awareness is tougher because youve got [to reach] guys at medical school, Farrell says. You have to get them early because its very hard to teach old dogs new tricks, particularly specialists. Facts About Sleep Apnea Because there are as many people with sleep apnea as those with diabetes and asthma, Farrell says it is important that general practitioners and internists begin treating sleep disorders such as sleep apnea from a practical standpointsleep laboratories cannot handle every sleep disorder case. Sleep apnea is as prevalent [as diabetes and asthma], so we need to get to the family physicians the gatekeepers who actually do the diagnosing, and prescribe the bulk of the treatment and only refer the tough cases to sleep labs, Farrell says. Because with that number of people, you couldnt build enough sleep labs in 100 years. But right now, sleep physicians see the sleep lab as an annuityyouve got a 6-month waiting period [and that] makes you feel comfortable. Patients just have to wait too long to get tested. Though the expectations are that the study will receive widespread notice, Farrell says, sleep medicine has a long way to go to win the game against sleep apnea. It would be nice if [the study] got us a first down, he says. C.A. Wolski is associate editor of Sleep Review. |
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