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How to Get A Good Night's Sleep
It's hard to have a productive day after a bad night's sleep. Yet, 40 million Americans have chronic sleep problems and another 20 million to 30 million occasionally don't get the sleep they need, according to the National Commission on Sleep Disorders. One in three Americans has trouble falling or staying asleep on any given night. Fatigue is a major cause of traffic and industrial accidents. These accidents produce billions of dollars in costs, thousands of deaths, and millions of disabilities. In addition, research has shown sleep deprivation can affect memory as well as the ability to learn and retain new information. Adequate sleep may help prevent disease as lack of sleep may make your immune system operate less efficiently. Adults need from ten to seven hours of sleep a night. Most American adults sleep an average of 6.4 hours a night. Using eight as a benchmark, most of us are racking up sleep debt at the rate of about 1.5 hours a day. The following techniques can help you fall and stay asleep more easily. Talk to your doctor or a sleep-disorder specialist if the quality of your sleep doesn't improve despite your efforts. Improving your sleep habits is the best way to beat insomnia. Sleeping pills should be taken only occasionally and as a last resort. When used too often, these potentially addictive pills can diminish the quality of your sleep and produce serious side effects. If you use sleeping pills, these guidelines will help you do so safely: Doctors estimate about 12 million Americans have sleep apnea. People with the condition stop breathing for 10 to 30 seconds at a time while they are sleeping. These short stops in breathing can happen up to 400 times every night. The periods of not breathing wake the person up from deep sleep. Overweight individuals and men over 50 have the greatest risk of the condition. However, you don't have to be overweight to develop it. The biggest risk factor for children is large tonsils. Other people (adults and children) are simply born with narrowed nasal passages, small facial bones (cheek bones and/or jaw bones), or extra-soft tissues within the backs of their throats. Obstructive sleep apnea is the most common type of apnea. If you have this type, something is blocking the passage or windpipe that brings air into your body. Your windpipe might be blocked by your tongue, tonsils or uvula. Sleep apnea can cause heart disease and stroke if it goes untreated. You are also more likely to have traffic accidents if you drive while you're sleepy. Symptoms of sleep apnea include ear-splitting snores, daytime headaches and chronic daytime fatigue. Sleepiness contributes to a significant number of automobile deaths as well as other major catastrophes each year in this country. People should take fatigue seriously and understand that it can cause serious injuries; they should not drive or perform tasks that require close attention when they are sleepy. Other symptoms relate to not receiving proper sleep. When people do not breathe properly, their oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels build up through the night. This causes the following symptoms: Your doctor can diagnose sleep apnea. The person you sleep with may notice it first. You, or that person, may notice heavy snoring or long pauses in your breathing during sleep. If you have symptoms of sleep apnea, your doctor may ask you to go to a sleep center for a sleep study. If you have sleep apnea, these steps may help you sleep better: The primary medical therapy is Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, or CPAP. CPAP gently pumps air into the upper airway through a mask worn over the nose. This slight increase in air pressure ppumpsS open the upper airway just enough to prevent any snoring as well as all apneas. Other medical options are mouth pieces called tongue retaining devices that help keep the jaw or tongue forward. There are several surgical procedures to help correct sleep apnea which include snipping out the uvula (the floppy tissue that hangs down in the back of the throat) and some other soft tissues. Anxiety and stress are the most common causes of insomnia. But sleeplessness can also be caused by a variety of medical conditions and medications. If you suffer from insomnia and have any of the following medical conditions, ask your doctor about possible treatments. Allergies, asthma, bronchitis and emphysema can interfere with your breathing at night. In addition, many medications used to treat these conditions cause insomnia. Ask your doctor to give you a dosage schedule least likely to interfere with your bedtime. Heartburn can interfere with your sleep when stomach acid seeps into the esophagus, triggering a reflex that wakes you up. To reduce the incidence of heartburn: Avoid coffee, alcohol, chocolate and high-fat and highly acidic foods. Don't eat late at night. The pain and stiffness of arthritis often keep sufferers from sleeping well. Pain relievers and regular exercise that increase your joints' range of motion may provide relief. Many women experience restless sleep and early morning awakenings when they reach menopause. Women on hormone replacement therapy are less likely to experience sleeping problems. Ask your doctor if you can change to a related drug or alter the dosage or the time you take the medication if you have sleep problems and regularly take one or more of these drugs: Excedrin, Anacin, Triaminicin, prescription diet pills and other drugs that contain amphetamine, beta blockers, decongestants, antidepressants, antihypertensive medications, steroids, thyroid hormones, antimetabolites, oral contraceptives, bronchodilating drugs for asthma and tranquilizers.
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