Anonymous wrote:Wow ok I'm pretty shocked that it could be sleep apnea. I could be in peri or in menopause, I don't know. I'm on the pill. I will look into the apnea Thanks everyone. I have been awake for hours at a time at night recently and I thought it was maybe anxiety, but my heart has never beat like that before.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have experience with the implant to treat sleep apnea?
Anonymous wrote:Wow ok I'm pretty shocked that it could be sleep apnea. I could be in peri or in menopause, I don't know. I'm on the pill. I will look into the apnea Thanks everyone. I have been awake for hours at a time at night recently and I thought it was maybe anxiety, but my heart has never beat like that before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It could be either a panic attack or sleep apnea, unfortunately. It can be hard to tell the difference and you should ask for an at-home sleep apnea test.
I have anxiety and a panic disorder that produces the symptoms you describe. I've had too many to count, OP! But I also suspect I have apnea episodes, because sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night with a gasp, and the sensation I can't breath (which then often turns into a panic attack, but only afterward - complicated!). I've gotten checked for sleep apnea. The problem is, since I'm anxious, every time I'm strapped to the little sleep wiring apparatus, that's the night I can only doze... so of course the machine can't record a breathing event, since I'm not deeply asleep at any point! Stupid anxiety.
I have sleep apnea. Before getting my cpap I would wake up terrified with my heart racing. I would stop breathing in my sleep and my body would react -- my heart would be pounding out of my chest and that would wake me up. Felt like an anxiety attack. I mean ... it sort of is, if you were being smothered you would be freaking out, heart pounding, and trying to gasp for air. Physically it ends up being pretty much the same thing.
PP you replied to. Not everyone wakes up, though. Many people just sleep through it. My son has mild sleep apnea and never realized it. I noticed when I was in his room one day and heard him stop breathing for like a full minute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It could be either a panic attack or sleep apnea, unfortunately. It can be hard to tell the difference and you should ask for an at-home sleep apnea test.
I have anxiety and a panic disorder that produces the symptoms you describe. I've had too many to count, OP! But I also suspect I have apnea episodes, because sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night with a gasp, and the sensation I can't breath (which then often turns into a panic attack, but only afterward - complicated!). I've gotten checked for sleep apnea. The problem is, since I'm anxious, every time I'm strapped to the little sleep wiring apparatus, that's the night I can only doze... so of course the machine can't record a breathing event, since I'm not deeply asleep at any point! Stupid anxiety.
I have sleep apnea. Before getting my cpap I would wake up terrified with my heart racing. I would stop breathing in my sleep and my body would react -- my heart would be pounding out of my chest and that would wake me up. Felt like an anxiety attack. I mean ... it sort of is, if you were being smothered you would be freaking out, heart pounding, and trying to gasp for air. Physically it ends up being pretty much the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:It could be either a panic attack or sleep apnea, unfortunately. It can be hard to tell the difference and you should ask for an at-home sleep apnea test.
I have anxiety and a panic disorder that produces the symptoms you describe. I've had too many to count, OP! But I also suspect I have apnea episodes, because sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night with a gasp, and the sensation I can't breath (which then often turns into a panic attack, but only afterward - complicated!). I've gotten checked for sleep apnea. The problem is, since I'm anxious, every time I'm strapped to the little sleep wiring apparatus, that's the night I can only doze... so of course the machine can't record a breathing event, since I'm not deeply asleep at any point! Stupid anxiety.