Your Child's Health
Night time is the right time.
That saying "if
you don't snooze you lose" could very well apply to a large part of
the pediatric population who suffer from unrecognized sleep disorders.
Poor
concentration at school, irritability, and excessive daytime sleepiness can
be caused by obstructed nasal passages and throat. Often a parent knows
a child snores or even gasps occasionally while sleeping but rarely brings
it to the attention of the physician during a regular office call. Unless
the physician or health care provider has an awareness of the frequency that
sleep disorders can occur in children, the problem never gets solved. Only
the symptoms get treated.
If a child
wakes up frequently at night and then goes to the bathroom ask if he or
she was awakened first and then decided to go to the bathroom. Parents
assume that if the child gets up to relieve themselves at night that a full
bladder is what woke them. Instead the child already was awake
and then proceeded to the bathroom.
Here is a
checklist to help you identify a potential risk for low oxygen to the brain
at night with an accompanying sleep disorder.
- loud snoring
- gasping for air, long pauses between breaths
- short wide neck
- obesity which increases abdominal pressure upwards when laying down
- daytime sleepiness even when a regular bedtime schedule is followed
- history of enlarged tonsils and adenoids often with allergies and frequent
ear infections
- large, thick tongue in relation to the back of the mouth usually noticed
by the dentist
- frequent night time awakenings for no reason
- falling asleep in class, irritability, need for short "catnaps" during
the day or after school
A simple
test can be performed at home, usually for free by a home health care agency
that supplies respiratory therapy equipment. An order must come from
the doctor first. A small oxygen sensor called a pulse oximeter is
taped to one finger overnight and the concentration of oxygen is constantly
monitored. If
the oxygen saturation drops significantly from 99% to below 90%,especially
while laying on the back, you can be sure there is a problem.
Usually
it takes a team approach to determine the best treatment. Often an
ear, nose, and throat specialist called an otolaryngologist can look
at the structure of the mouth, throat, and tongue. The dentist and
primary care specialist also need to be involved. The teachers and
parents can monitor any changes in behavior and school performance.
What's
most important is to have an awareness that sleep disturbances and upper
airway obstructions can cause serious health and behavior problems if not
observed early enough. Osteopathic
physicians have unique training over and above traditional medicine to recognize
how the structure of the body can affect the function of the body.
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