Sleep apnea dreams are different, here's why - Dr Kaveh LIVE

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Medical Secrets

Medical Secrets

Күн бұрын

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@flapwheat
@flapwheat Жыл бұрын
Man, health care needs LOTS more great people like you!
@celestialstar124
@celestialstar124 Жыл бұрын
+1 ❤
@cocoseward9712
@cocoseward9712 Жыл бұрын
I agree
@cameronmorgan4585
@cameronmorgan4585 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, most are complacent, lazy, pill pushers that treat symptoms and couldn't care less about the cause.
@alexcisneros2980
@alexcisneros2980 Жыл бұрын
Indeed!
@kathysharpe7339
@kathysharpe7339 Жыл бұрын
Well there are NOT more than 5 in the entire world that give a flip.
@cclothier2172
@cclothier2172 Жыл бұрын
I was in the hospital from 5/6 to 5/9 with COPD Pneumonia. One of my male nurses, we were talking about being a nurse he told me he really wants to be a anesthesiologist so I gave him your channel. The next day he came in and was so thankful that he was watch you all night!
@jljordan1
@jljordan1 Жыл бұрын
He should be a CRNA.
@leslie-tc2po
@leslie-tc2po Жыл бұрын
@@jljordan1 what's a crna?
@kristinogara7630
@kristinogara7630 Жыл бұрын
A CRNA is a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist.
@leslie-tc2po
@leslie-tc2po Жыл бұрын
@@kristinogara7630 Thank You!
@tammymorgan8160
@tammymorgan8160 Жыл бұрын
Do you have many patients that wake up in surgery ? I woke very briefly during a very rough open heart I was clinically dead .I'm not traumatized by waking .I am ok with it . Can a heart patient benefit from ketamine therapy? 😊
@eileenmetzkow8475
@eileenmetzkow8475 Жыл бұрын
Retired Nurse. I never knew bad dreams correlated to PTSD, DEPRESSION, SLEEP APNEA,etc…. I’m blown away by learning this now. Thank you for teaching me this. 💕🙏🏼
@tracysummers7081
@tracysummers7081 Жыл бұрын
This is so interesting.... I have Sleep Apnea, Severe PTSD, Depression and Anxiety 😢
@tracysummers7081
@tracysummers7081 Жыл бұрын
DREAMS ARE EXTREMELY SPIRITUAL!
@stephenfiore9960
@stephenfiore9960 Жыл бұрын
…To me, the more you sin, the more you have nightmares
@plan4life
@plan4life Жыл бұрын
@@stephenfiore9960 Probably why I was plagued by nightmares when I was a sweet innocent kid then. 🙄
@joanthompson4559
@joanthompson4559 Жыл бұрын
@@plan4life 😆🤗😂
@YouNeverKnowWhoIsWatching
@YouNeverKnowWhoIsWatching Жыл бұрын
I've had 30+ years of action packed dreams where I'm either fighting or running away or trying to hide away from danger. What you mentioned in the second half of the video about patients waking up in a violent mood or people who regularly have hostile dreams really hits home with my lifetime of vivid dreaming. Years of group therapy has been dismissive or unconcerned with my dreams even when I have mentioned the worrisome nature of some of them. Therapists have recommended a calming sleep routine (which I already have); avoiding alcohol and caffeine (which I already do); and to be mindful of what I watch before bedtime (I gave up scary movies and watching the news 10 years ago. ). My point in saying all that is that I always knew there was something else going on. Its more likely my newly diagnosed central apnea has been the cause of my mental health issues. Poor sleep causing depression, anxiety, and memory issues...not the depression being the cause of everything. One thing I have been asking is why don't these doctors, therapists, and specialty health care providers look at each other's findings to see what issues might be causing other health problems? If they would work together putting together each piece of my health puzzle they could each see the whole picture.😖🤕
@carolsphar2183
@carolsphar2183 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you have REM SLEEP BEHAVIOR DISORDER
@GorgeouslyStupidThing
@GorgeouslyStupidThing Жыл бұрын
I've experienced the same. I'm wondering if you're a man or woman. As a woman, I've felt horridly dismissed by male doctors to the point that I won't even see one anymore unless necessary. I've even been told that any issues I've had with pain or insomnia are due to being an unmarried woman... not kidding. But, I could have written the above, too. I'm glad you now have a diagnosis (I don't... there's nothing ever found) & hope you feel much better really soon. Be well...
@Spiritualpanda2
@Spiritualpanda2 Жыл бұрын
The reason why is because doctors are not as smart as you think and they think they are. Just like with everyone you have good and bad people at all professions. Most doctors don’t care enough to find a solution but rather just throw a temporary bandaid like medication or whatever they’ve been taught. If they haven’t been taught well they won’t be able to teach or heal well. The people I graduated premed with were idiots who were able to be good test takers but I wondered why they were even there in the program to begin with. *MANY* People do the bare minimum to get by financially and nothing more. Most often you *NEVER* hear of the doctor that says, you know I’ve been thinking about your case endlessly trying to find a solution and this is what I came to( like dr house- I wish that were the case)…. They I bet hardly keep up with their studies once they get certified/licensed and if they do its because they’re forced to. Doctors are only taught a specific niche- medication or surgery nothing else. You never hear a doctor recommend LEGIT dietary changes instead of medication like how eating a grapefruit naturally lowers your blood pressure which is why you don’t to eat it with your blood pressure medication. They both do the same thing. There is too much reliance on medication and half ass knowledge these days, as well as egotistical non empathetic doctors( to a certain degree you need to have an inflated ego in that profession, but they often refuse to admit when they don’t know the answer and just say that its all in your head as a go to when they don’t know).
@kp-gbuniqueinterest
@kp-gbuniqueinterest Жыл бұрын
Iv notice this a lot with anyone with a PhD. They think they are the smartest people and dont care about anything else. I work at a science institute and to me they are actually dumb in my mind. they dont realize that everything has a coloration and affects other things. @@Spiritualpanda2
@richardmaloneriki1811
@richardmaloneriki1811 Жыл бұрын
Your different doctors can only access your medical records if you sign a release for each doctor individually, releasing your records to each doctor respectively. For 3 doctors to read your charts together, that is 8 releases you have to sign as a patient.
@empressadelexxmotherofjohn10
@empressadelexxmotherofjohn10 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating, thank you from someone who has suffered from hideous paralysing demonic nightmares on and off all my life. It feels good to be acknowledged.
@eleanapshock9016
@eleanapshock9016 Жыл бұрын
You problem looks more like you are been attack by demonic humans spirits! Cover yourself every night with the Blood of the Lamb Jesus Christ of Nazareth. What is your schedule iSay this exactly as I wrote it!
@bearteeka4782
@bearteeka4782 3 ай бұрын
My brother has those. He told me he drinks copious amounts of whiskey so that he will not remember his dreams. :(
@gioiaferrante
@gioiaferrante Жыл бұрын
I love this doctor. It's like being in medical school all over again but fun. Great information for people. Great personality as well.
@ninahall2845
@ninahall2845 Жыл бұрын
I've had more than a few surgeries and never had anesthesia talk to me like this! Yay for you Doc! You're helping people you don't even know ❤
@leslie-tc2po
@leslie-tc2po Жыл бұрын
I'm gonna assume you're a Doc too. I really love this Doc as well. As a patient I've had some pretty horrible Doctors. I've also had some truly life saving caring Doc's! & Those guys are the best! Thanks to all Wonderful Doc's out there!
@riccardo50001
@riccardo50001 Жыл бұрын
He's cute too!!!! I think he likes "being on stage."
@gioiaferrante
@gioiaferrante Жыл бұрын
@@riccardo50001 lol no he's just being honest kind and caring. I know all too well about the sergyon being better than you mind set and it's simply awful. He's just a sincere man that wants to inform other's. Sure he's cute but so in my step sibling and he should be reported to the medical board he in know way should be operating on people. After what he did to me growing up. Raping people even myself he's always gotten away with everything because he's good looking but a toxic narcissist. I reported him year's ago we don't talk or his mom who I'd swear something is wrong with the two. My dad passed away and they hide it from me and they refuse too give me everything he left me. I refuse to go to their level or have a breakdown. Karma bits hard and it will when she passes. They don't realize I have legal documents and could call the feds he'd lose more than his medical license and everything he owns. This doctor is anything but like that what he's doing is human and we need more human doctor's like this.
@mj6962
@mj6962 Жыл бұрын
Yes I agree. However, I think there is a small possibility that he has a “play hospital” in his basement where he does operations on victims without any anesthesia. LOL I could totally see that in a movie scenario. HA!!!
@mitziheinack3979
@mitziheinack3979 Жыл бұрын
I had my left knee replacement this morning. I always sing in the OR to the staff in there!!! I did that for my left, right hip and right knee. They love me!! I wrote a song for the surgery today! To thank everyone for helping me !!!! I am the patient who is happy when going under anesthesia 😂
@ariesleorising9421
@ariesleorising9421 Жыл бұрын
Great attitude!!😊
@alisonbufarale3406
@alisonbufarale3406 Жыл бұрын
Awww. I am always very relaxed even before they give me the pre anesthesia relaxant. I just had my 21st sedated procedure/surgery last Monday so I guess it’s because I know what to expect.
@slgogo594
@slgogo594 Жыл бұрын
@Mitzi Heinack wow! What a wonderful attitude to go in with for such invasive surgeries. I wish you a speedy, comfortable and as pain free recovery as possible!!! Best wishes my friend❤
@sandramullen9948
@sandramullen9948 Жыл бұрын
I am so glad that I stumbled upon you Dr! I subscribed so I can hear more! Thank you!
@RepentfollowJesus
@RepentfollowJesus Жыл бұрын
​@@alisonbufarale3406i have had 3 surgeries. The more I have the more afraid I am.
@kellykelly7747
@kellykelly7747 Жыл бұрын
I have obstructive sleep apnea, and boy, did I have aggressive dreams. I would thrash, yell, cuss. It was trippy. I have a cpap machine now, and the aggressive dreams are virtually gone. I'm glad to know that the low oxygen was causing it. Thanks, doc!
@catfishm.1361
@catfishm.1361 Жыл бұрын
Was just put on night time low oxygen hope it helps my odd dreams as well. COPD and asthma are my things.
@blue-fj9ky
@blue-fj9ky Жыл бұрын
My mother had COPD. She was a very gentle person but would wake up hostile and aggressive from oxygen deprivation.
@gothboschincarnate3931
@gothboschincarnate3931 Жыл бұрын
its not the low oxygen...its the struggle to get it...duh
@Rain9Quinn
@Rain9Quinn Жыл бұрын
I always had dreams like that too! And yes, before the cpap (and during-i would tear it off). I had to use the dental appliance instead, but never associated those violent thrashing dreams pre-diagnosis. Thanks for mentioning it. 🙏🏻
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
I have apnea too but that doesn't happen to me so this is mostly bullshit.
@planning_with_patches5860
@planning_with_patches5860 Жыл бұрын
Just before I was diagnosed with severe sleep apnea I had two surgery's. I felt more refreshed and energetic when I woke up then I can ever remember. I think those were the only few times in the last decade that I felt well rested. The anesthesia was so amazing for me.
@howdie729
@howdie729 Жыл бұрын
I thought it was the anesthesia that gave me a deep restful sleep, too, since I awoke so refreshed, but now I think it was actually the leftover opiates in my system making me feel extra cheerful lol
@WENCHintheTINFOILhat
@WENCHintheTINFOILhat Жыл бұрын
That’s how Michael Jackson felt too.
@GNARLOUSE
@GNARLOUSE Жыл бұрын
Extreme apnea victim here. Now I wake up after 6 hours of dreamless sleep. I use 60-100 milligrams of RSO every night. Once you try it your life will change.
@michelleslifeonrepeat
@michelleslifeonrepeat Жыл бұрын
Same here
@cathymcdonald1285
@cathymcdonald1285 8 ай бұрын
I've had the same feeling after surgery as well. I felt alert, efficient, no brain fog like I usually have. I'm so tired of being tired (sleep apnea/fibro/chronic fatigue/+etc) I've recently been asking my doctors if it was the oxygen I get with the surgery that is what's making the difference. I hadn't really thought about if the propofol was the reason. But I still think it's that I'm not getting enough oxygen. Hopefully we will get to some definitive answers soon. Very interesting video
@ericgorder1
@ericgorder1 Жыл бұрын
You are great and compassionate doctor! We desperately need more like you!
@cynthiabakke825
@cynthiabakke825 Жыл бұрын
"Mom why do you scream in your sleep?". I attributed it to trauma, as I had horrible nightmares long before my apnea. However, the screaming was new, and no amount of prazosin touched the nightmares I was having. Went on a CPAP and voila! No more screaming, just normal good and bad dreams. I didn't know why, though. Thanks for this in-depth and clear explanation!
@timmooney7528
@timmooney7528 Жыл бұрын
Is that what they refer to as night terrors? I figure your body detects low oxygen, and "startles" you in order to wake up and breathe.
@KPHVAC
@KPHVAC Жыл бұрын
Getting a CPAP machine and getting the correct pressure dialed in has completely changed my life! I got my CPAP about a year ago. I sleep amazing now, I have energy again, and I'm down 10 pounds! If you are always tired and snore get a sleep study done!!
@KPHVAC
@KPHVAC Жыл бұрын
@concretehead2790 I don't have any stomach gas issues from CPAP. I've heard that can be a side effect but I've never had it happen to me. You could probably search some videos on KZbin to hopefully find some solutions if that's happening to you with CPAP.
@KPHVAC
@KPHVAC Жыл бұрын
@concretehead2790 I'm pretty sure that's called Aerophagia if you are getting air in your stomach from CPAP. I'm sure there are videos talking about tips and tricks to minimize that. I know I've seen some videos talking about it. I think it's usually caused by really high pressures on CPAP. You might have to sleep in a different position and/or use a lower pressure. I'm no expert since I've never experienced it.
@sunisbest1234
@sunisbest1234 Жыл бұрын
​@concretehead2790 i very occasionally wake up with a bloated, painful stomach. Sometimes it can be a leak somewhere in the mask or tube. Sometimes the mask can move slightly causing excess pressure. I now take an antacid before bed each night. Also, now have the head of my bed slightly raised.
@paris6378
@paris6378 Жыл бұрын
I have been on a sleep apnea machine for around the 90's . I just got my 3rd one in 2023 . If you have insurance you can get one every 4 years I think. Also, I completely stop breathing in REM sleep but thanks to my machine I am blessed and use it faithfully. I am glad you got one.
@sunisbest1234
@sunisbest1234 Жыл бұрын
@@paris6378 it's so weird, isn't it, that we can cease breathing. I've been on the machine for about 5-6 years now. Was so shocked when I had a sleep study done that I stopped breathing 28 times an hour. That's a lot!
@joncampos-cw2tk
@joncampos-cw2tk Жыл бұрын
I don’t have apnea nightmares, but I’ve met the most interesting people and a recurring dream has actually changed over time to the point that I look forward to having it.
@Unkn0wn1133
@Unkn0wn1133 Жыл бұрын
Someone contacted me and told me theyd known me in their dreams for years and they knew a lot about me that id never told one single person. Not sure if it was a stalker but pretty freaky.
@kimfleury
@kimfleury Жыл бұрын
​@@Unkn0wn1133 That's especially creepy after listening to the last 2 or 3 episodes of The Exorcist Files on one of the podcasting apps (can't remember if it was Spotify or Podbean). It was a single case presented in 2 or 3 episodes. They were the most recent uploads when I listened to them this past Saturday, 6/3/23. The similarity is creeping me out.
@mherndon
@mherndon Жыл бұрын
I have ongoing dreams. I've been working on the same house for 3 years. Thos lady keeps finding more for me to do. Also I dream of trying to buy a drink or looking for one. Those a are when I wake with dry mouth.
@christianelder4983
@christianelder4983 Жыл бұрын
When trying to make sense of dreams, you might find this Bible passage of interest in Joel chapter 2 - "And it shall come to pass afterward That I will pour out My Spirit on all flesh; Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, Your old men shall dream dreams, Your young men shall see visions. And also on My menservants and on My maidservant I will pour out My Spirit in those days. “And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth: Blood and fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, And the moon into blood, Before the coming of the great and awesome day of the Lord. And it shall come to pass That whoever calls on the name of the Lord Shall be saved." Joel 2:28-32.
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
I know what you mean. I rarely have apnea nightmares and I never use my CPAP. My dreams are usually amazing where I'm with hot guys or they are sexual in nature and I don't ever want to wake up, but I always end up waking up at the best part of the dream.
@xSheravenx
@xSheravenx Жыл бұрын
This was one of the most interesting and informative videos I've ever seen. You're an amazing speaker/teacher. Thank you!
@chezmanya
@chezmanya Жыл бұрын
Thanks for addressing topic of sleep apnea, a diagnosis that is greatly underutilized, and under tested. Most people, like me in the past, are in denial about their symptoms. Thankfully, when I was 61, I finally had a sleep study and I have slept with CPAP ever since. Can’t begin to tell you how CPAP has improved my overall sleep experience, and I never sleep without it. I even bought a travel machine to take with me overseas. I keep thinking of someone’s statement “sleep is 1/3 of your life.“ So make the most of it. Whenever I have surgery, which, thankfully, isn’t too often, I always mention sleep apnea to my anesthesiologist.
@jayxxxx7876
@jayxxxx7876 Жыл бұрын
I am a sleep apnea sufferer. You just gave me a wealth of valuable information that even my sleep professionals could not. Thank you!!
@Repdem
@Repdem Жыл бұрын
Tongue and throat exercises have been shown to reduce sleep apnea
@sandyashworth2576
@sandyashworth2576 Жыл бұрын
Are you able to tell me how to do them?
@Mack7565
@Mack7565 Жыл бұрын
@@sandyashworth2576 Try Dr. Adam Fields Sleep Apnea Exercises... kzbin.info/www/bejne/l4THlGSmgNOkerssi=D1ISWCRujpnKvc4i Here's another one... kzbin.info/www/bejne/f6LLpaZma7x4ebMsi=eaFF9HC1LMjQl-F8
@Miss_Distress
@Miss_Distress Жыл бұрын
I have severe OSA. Before I was diagnosed, I had anxiety inducing dreams every night. I won’t call them nightmares for the most part, just unpleasant dreams that contained aspects of trauma from my life. It made me dread sleep. I love my CPAP machine, I sleep without dreams most of the time 😁
@maryderry8301
@maryderry8301 Жыл бұрын
I also love my CPAP I cannot sleep without it. But I still can have incredibly vivid dreams as you say not exactly nightmares but very disturbing. Dreams of Abandonment and homelessness and hopelessness.
@paa5451
@paa5451 Жыл бұрын
@Vaywen Isnt tge cpap so loud though that it keeps you awake?
@Miss_Distress
@Miss_Distress Жыл бұрын
@@paa5451 no. It’s very quiet. You can always use ear plugs, white noise, airpods, or anything if you really wanted, but honestly modern machines are whisper quiet. Believe me - I am a light sleeper.
@mobilehomelife4028
@mobilehomelife4028 Жыл бұрын
Holy smoke, I had no idea why dreaming was so horrific, I have sleep apnea and need to get the cpap device setup. My dreams are full of trauma but erratic and not related to real life, I do have nightmares and night terrors.
@Miss_Distress
@Miss_Distress Жыл бұрын
@@mobilehomelife4028 you really should use the CPAP if it’s been prescribed. Sleep apnea is no joke Health-wise, and believe me you will be happy if those dreams go away. Sometimes we don’t realise how bad it is until it’s gone ❤️
@briangrussing9327
@briangrussing9327 Жыл бұрын
Thanks man! No one ever explained to me how ptsd & apnea are likely the primary cause of these constant dreams of being hunted/dissected/eaten alive every time i sleep more than a short nap. Its been so exhausting i believe i became addicted to extreme sleep deprivation (2-6 hrs/week). Youre doing great work bud, 🙏
@rebeccamay6420
@rebeccamay6420 Жыл бұрын
"Addicted to sleep deprivation" sounds about right. Basically, you keep forcing yourself to avoid sleep, only to prevent the nightmares.
@AlephTaV549
@AlephTaV549 Жыл бұрын
PRAY!!! Our Creator Almighty will help you if you ask Him. He did with me!!! HalleluYah!!
@lindaford1423
@lindaford1423 Жыл бұрын
TV TV
@That.Lady.withtheYarn
@That.Lady.withtheYarn Жыл бұрын
@@AlephTaV549 he needs a doctor to get the sleep apnea abs ptsd under control
@Gchapel17
@Gchapel17 Жыл бұрын
Same man. I would describe it as insomnia but I get 100% what you mean by “being addicted to sleep deprivation”
@aliensoup2420
@aliensoup2420 Жыл бұрын
I discovered many years ago that my sleep paralysis and bad dreams were related to difficulty breathing. I occasionally woke up moaning and trying to call out, imagining there was a threatening presence outside the door. I woke myself up gasping for air. After figuring that out, I tried to control my head and sleeping position to prevent it. I also started to wear a tooth-guard to prevent teeth grinding, and that interfered with my breathing. I have not experienced my usual vivid dreams for several years. Only recently, I have worked out the problems in my sleep habits, and am now experiencing vivid dreams in the morning, and feel the difference in the deepness and quality of sleep. I now know that when I have a vivid and interesting dream that I can remember, I have slept well.
@user-ks5cg5cd7m
@user-ks5cg5cd7m Жыл бұрын
I have had a similar experience.
@Yo_Gma
@Yo_Gma Жыл бұрын
Like I was swimming to the surface, gasping sometimes. And then while waiting for my CPAP I was scared to fall asleep, so the positioning of my body and head was a real struggle. And finally, getting my first CPAP. Ahhh, relief. I slept so well, so deep. Finally having my old, relaxed morning dreams again and wanting to stay in bed.
@jblyon2
@jblyon2 Жыл бұрын
I can confirm the apnea dreams. Some I wouldn't call nightmares, but still disturbing, and make sense when framed along with breathing stopping. Trying to nap after a long day of work was the worst. I'd only fall partially asleep and could feel my airway collapse, while also dreaming (or whatever is closest to dreaming in that state) overly disturbing things. My APAP is my best friend, and I have an entire shelf in the closet of spare supplies and parts, to make sure I never have to go without!
@augumentum
@augumentum Жыл бұрын
Since I have sleep apnea, I found this really interesting and relevant to my situation. He explains everything really well.
@janetsherwood7210
@janetsherwood7210 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so very much for sharing your knowledge. I have severe sleep apnea. I have nightmares/ night terrors. Grateful for your channel. Appreciate your body, mind, & soul approach. Your are one in a million! Outstanding physician! ! 🙏
@DreaminToo
@DreaminToo Жыл бұрын
I agree 100% with what you say, Dr. I am a new user of CPAP and I haven't had any nightmares while using it. Last night, I wasn't hooked up to my machine and I had horrific nightmares about defending myself from attacking rats. I've had a really bad day. But guess what?? Your video showed up on my feed and I've found my suspicions are correct. Thank you so much. I have PTSD and so I'll never go without my machine again!!! 💗
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
Some of us can't sleep at all with a machine.
@DreaminToo
@DreaminToo Жыл бұрын
@mrseddiediaz it takes time and patience but I admit it wasn't easy at first. More like torture until I found the right mask. A nasal mask is much better than a full one for sure 👌
@rosalineanderson9209
@rosalineanderson9209 Жыл бұрын
This was helpful to learn why I don't usually remember my dreams (severe sleep apnea-and ready to sleep whenever). It also helped me understand why my dreams are more violent and depression/PTSD based when I haven't used a CPAP.
@wandringjoule4x
@wandringjoule4x Жыл бұрын
I truly appreciate you taking the time to give us this free, meaningful information after working long, hard hours in the operating room. If I ever had to have surgery again, I would only hope I had you or someone like you in the operating room. It matters so much if there's compassion, since most of us patients are a bit nervous about operations. I used to have an enormous fear of being anesthesthised, especially with general anesthesia, for the obvious fear of not waking up afterwards and also for actually NOT being fully asleep and thereby experiencing excruciating pain. Having sleep apnea would compound that fear, as well as the embarrassment. I always mention to the anesthesiologist that I suffer from sleep crapnea, I mean apnea. Not having any control over the experience may make us fearful, but it also made me realise that maybe letting go of the fear and just relaxing into it, as you say, would be a refreshing change, thereby thinking of it as a little pause, since it seems that our brains are in overdrive most of the time. (That's one reason why they say it's quite useful to take time to meditate everyday. ) So, I'm much more relaxed when they're about to put to sleep. I even make it a point to crack a silly joke even if no one will probably laugh at it. I worry more about the outcome and the amount of pain I will suffer, especially in the beginning. To tell you the truth, I don't remember dreaming when on anesthesia or striking out violently at anyone because of hypoxia due to my sleep apnea. I would hope not. No bruised faces, thank goodness. I do take all the medication you mentioned, however, but wished I didn't have to take any of them. Moreover, the more medications one takes, the more chances of complications
@JessicaLaska
@JessicaLaska Жыл бұрын
Love this video! I agree dreams are important! I have anxiety, depression, take SSRIs and have moderate sleep apnea. Gives me great comfort hearing you speak on this subject! Thank you very much!
@laurel2dream837
@laurel2dream837 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for addressing the nightmares associated with sleep apnea! I believe I probably had sleep apnea my entire life growing up, because I had nightmares! I was finally diagnosed about 15 years ago with sleep apnea
@jillcooper6740
@jillcooper6740 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for addressing this drugs that cause less REM or delayed REM. I'm an RPSGT, and do sleep studies full time (13 yrs now) SO many doctors prescribe anti depressants but IMO, this only compounds the problem. REM sleep is responsible for mood, memory, concentration etc. Almost without exception, my patients on anti-depressants never get enough REM and therefore have even more issues with depression etc.
@MedicalSecrets
@MedicalSecrets Жыл бұрын
Thank you for what you do for your patience!
@lauraoliver525
@lauraoliver525 Жыл бұрын
I'm experiencing this 😢
@MrLeFluffy1
@MrLeFluffy1 Жыл бұрын
PLEASE, what medications reduce REM? I'm a narcoleptic, and one of my problems is that from the moment my eyes close to the moment they open, I'm in REM. I dream immediately, and sometimes I dream _as_ I'm falling asleep and waking up. This means no matter how much I sleep, I'm never getting any rest, which compounds on itself. I've been looking for years, asking doctor after doctor, about anything that reduces REM. What is out there that I can ask my dr about???
@mb4197
@mb4197 Жыл бұрын
​@@MedicalSecrets "patience" or "patients"?
@christinelindsey195
@christinelindsey195 Жыл бұрын
​@MrLeFluffy1 if you do a search for medications to reduce REM sleep, they show several types. Good luck, I have sleep issues as well, I never wake up refreshed. 😢
@josefinematildehansenvonki2384
@josefinematildehansenvonki2384 Жыл бұрын
Ever since I started "translating" my own dreams (and nigthmares), I have gained a deeper understanding of what was importen to my subconscious. And I feel more balanced every day😊
@sarahbethsstitching9937
@sarahbethsstitching9937 Жыл бұрын
I love this. I have severe sleep apnea and central apnea along with a phrenic nerve injury. Thank you for explaining this. I also use a bipap autoSV. I also have narcolepsy so I’m a challenging patient when I have anesthesia. I also have confusional arousals when waking. Thank you for making this episode. I learned a lot!! I used to wake up with sleep paralysis and I trained myself to yell out my service dogs name and she would lick my face to wake me because I couldn’t fully wake myself.
@MedicalSecrets
@MedicalSecrets Жыл бұрын
Wow, I'm so impressed that you taught your service dog that!
@WandaYad-mv9bc
@WandaYad-mv9bc Жыл бұрын
Why are you not telling your patients about nose breathing especially at night...
@Yo_Gma
@Yo_Gma Жыл бұрын
I have severe central sleep apnea. My CPAP saved my life! I call it my boyfriend because I ALWAYS have him by my side.
@sarahbethsstitching9937
@sarahbethsstitching9937 Жыл бұрын
@@MedicalSecrets thanks so much. She was amazing. I now have another service dog 🐕‍🦺 that is also a medical alert dog. She is amazing. She picked up on me having narcolepsy before we realized what was wrong. She would wake me up if I dozed off during the day and about the time I started to feel sleepy or even before that she would be alerting me. She was the reason I was diagnosed.
@GNARLOUSE
@GNARLOUSE Жыл бұрын
I use RSO every night and have no dreams and wake up feeling like a champ!
@Christina.N.
@Christina.N. Жыл бұрын
Preach doc! Very encouraging to see a trained medical doctor incorporating more than just "conventional" practices. Subscribed for more!
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
Still its a lot of bullshit
@rosewinebrenner3179
@rosewinebrenner3179 Жыл бұрын
Informative talk from a compassionate doctor. Thank you for your offerings to the community!
@kathleenclarke1823
@kathleenclarke1823 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for helping me to understand my sleep apnea and it's impact on my health and surgery implications. I use mindfulness meditation daily and it really is effective for keeping me calm and grounded. I am impressed with your respect and compassion for your viewers and patients.
@rosealicia1782
@rosealicia1782 Жыл бұрын
I had no idea that was a thing! As someone who has sleep apnea I have had a lot of dreams related to water, typically tidal waves and swimming underwater, sometimes the rare sinking dreams, but had no idea that it was related to that! But a side note, I was really glad I had the chance to tell my oral surgeon I had sleep apnea before I got my wisdom teeth out (general anesthesia).
@bearteeka4782
@bearteeka4782 3 ай бұрын
No anesthesiologist ever has asked me about my dreams. I think that you are unique in this profession, Doctor Kaveh.
@taylormaddy9647
@taylormaddy9647 Жыл бұрын
I have severe sleep apnea (require CPAP) and I'm a 27 y/o female 5'2" 120lbs but have this because of my underdeveloped chin and Ehlers-Danlos disorder. I'd love to see a video about EDs and anesthesia if you have time. We definitely react differently and are more fragile (intubation). I mention my stats above because so often people look past young persons with sleep complaints esp if the young patient is thin. Sleep apnea affects so many people beyond the norm, (older heavier set male). Great video!
@timmooney7528
@timmooney7528 Жыл бұрын
I'm 53, and I should've taken the sleep study when I was in my 20's. I was showing signs of sleep apnea back in my mid 20's, but didn't know how bad it was or could get. Last year I had a heart attack, which made me realize how much of my life was robbed by having sleep apnea.
@taylormaddy9647
@taylormaddy9647 Жыл бұрын
@@timmooney7528 Tim I am sorry to hear about your heart attack, that must have been incredibly frightening. I'm glad you are alive! Yes, so many people normalize heavy snoring and don't realize that waking up gasping, or stopping for long periods of time not breathing can lead to severe complications. Untreated sleep apnea can lead to cognitive defects, irritability, memory fog, etc. (And even more severe complications like you mentioned above if untreated for decades). I hope you are on the mend and I wish you good health :)
@bradprice8040
@bradprice8040 Жыл бұрын
I have EDS also. It sucks. You talk about your chin but I just wanted to say you look amazing. Hopefully you don't have thoughts to the contrary. Find an effective exercise routine. You don't want the EDS to get bad down the road.
@taylormaddy9647
@taylormaddy9647 Жыл бұрын
@@bradprice8040 Thank you Brad! My EDs has progressed rapidly over the past ten years. I had severe scoliosis so I'm fused T3-L2. I don't have much mobility left, I'm very fall-prone. I now have extensive comorbid issues from my EDs. I cannot exercise much, I am doing pool therapy to help preserve what little strength I have left in my legs and hips.
@bradprice8040
@bradprice8040 Жыл бұрын
@@taylormaddy9647 sorry to hear that. I am fused c2-t2 so I feel your pain. I have a bit more neck mobility because of the EDS I believe but everything else is a raw nerve.
@napatriot1136
@napatriot1136 Жыл бұрын
This doctor is great with his explanations. Great bed side manner too. I really enjoy these videos.
@deborahfreed-fishelman2306
@deborahfreed-fishelman2306 Жыл бұрын
I hate to say this but I love receiving general anesthesia❤ It's truly when I feel the most relaxed!
@JoJoGranum
@JoJoGranum Жыл бұрын
Tbh same. It’s the only time my anxiety shuts off
@cris-RN
@cris-RN Жыл бұрын
Same here...just don't sleep long enough 😂
@sterlingmatsui154
@sterlingmatsui154 Жыл бұрын
Same Here~I have terrible insomnia and sleep apnea, when I do finally crash out from sheer exhaustion, usually around 4am...Best naps EVER whenever under anesthesia☆☆:)
@RR35592
@RR35592 Жыл бұрын
Best sleep ever
@that.sleep.dentist
@that.sleep.dentist 3 ай бұрын
I don’t feel relaxed under GA, because I’m completely unconscious. How can you feel ANY state of being when you’re out cold? All I know is one minute they’re telling me we’re headed into the OR, and the next I’m in recovery, begging told that everything went great.
@rp3741
@rp3741 Жыл бұрын
I've had 2 health care professionals in the last few months be unable to tell me why I always have horrible nightmares. Nobody told me the connection between metoprolol and nightmares. Wow! Glad I clicked on this
@MrErinholbert
@MrErinholbert 7 ай бұрын
I thankfully don’t have the nightmares just goofy dreams
@genevievebenedict7510
@genevievebenedict7510 Жыл бұрын
You are very informative and very pleasant! We need more doctors like you!
@PhoebeK
@PhoebeK Жыл бұрын
Dreams do have an important role in understanding what is happening in our bodies. I had a recurrent set of nightmares from puberty which were a key marker which finally got me the correct diagnosis as my consultant recognised them as a little discuss but a key marker of the very severest forms of PMDD. These nightmares reduced when I was on hormone-blocking treatment and disappeared completely after I had a hysterectomy inducing surgical menopause (the only cure for the worst types of PMDD). For the uninitiated PMDD is Premenstrual Dysmorphic Disorder the evil twin of PMS (premenstrual syndrome). On a related topic, the whole relationship between autistic sensory processing differences and sleep creates interesting situations as these sensory differences affect the way dreaming is experienced. There is also an overlap between the sleep state and some manifestations of Autistic overload shutdowns. It would be really interesting for you to discuss some of the challenges faced by autistic patients around anaesthesia as the community faces specific challenges, especially with sensory issues, including the potential of going into sensory overload even while asleep or under anaesthesia (few people realise that this is even possible). This interests me as an autistic adult since when I had an operation and when I have had sedation for certain procedures I tend to come around and then go state into an overload shutdown which significantly impairs my ability to communicate (I have situational mutism which is triggered by sensory overload).
@M_SC
@M_SC Жыл бұрын
Yes I’d like to hear about that too
@hrathweg
@hrathweg Жыл бұрын
I have PMDD, AuDHD and hypermobile Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. Yes to all of this especially lidocaine! I’m having a balloon sinuplasty since my sinus cavities have deviated, and have paradoxical reactions to many medications as well as hyper sensitivities!! No dreams though. Not a one. Not in a very very long time. Years.
@cynthiastogden7000
@cynthiastogden7000 Жыл бұрын
Yes would be good.
@deepikapawar3481
@deepikapawar3481 Жыл бұрын
@Phoebek hey my mother aged 56 years she was diagnosed with sleep apnea and had a history of HTN where systolic rises but she always complains for air in the stomach ( aerophagia) may be ! Please suggest what I can do for this m bit confused
@trinaroe5132
@trinaroe5132 Жыл бұрын
I’ve had sleep apnea and asthma for about 15 years. I don’t EVER recall having nightmares about suffocating or drowning, even before I was diagnosed and started using inhalers and a CPAP machine. I do recall a lot of my dreams, but almost never have nightmares since I was a child. As a child I frequently had nightmares about falling (I was a tree climber) or about trying to cross a railroad track and my foot or bike getting stuck with a train coming (probably watching too many Dudley Do-Right cartoons with railroad suspense scenes!)
@RicCrouch
@RicCrouch Жыл бұрын
I used to have the occasional “underwater” dream, but my more common sleep apnea dream was similar to yours, and I never understood why until I started using a CPAP. after I had been on the CPAP a while, I realized that I had stopped having a VERY common dream “theme” I’d always had. Before CPAP, my dream would often involve climbing on some high structure, or rickety staircase, or having to make a jump across a high gap, and being too scared to actually do it. It wasn’t until I stopped having them that I realized this was my brain realizing it was in danger due to lack of oxygen, and relaying that via the scariest thing it could think of. You see, I’m absolutely TERRIFIED of heights (a weird problem for a professional pilot, but that’s a different story). Once I got onto CPAP 6 years ago, I haven’t had that dream once. (Nor the underwater ones.) Amazing how much better life is when you can actually breathe! :)
@beastshawnee
@beastshawnee Жыл бұрын
falling dreams are common too. it’s a natural fear but I do think they may be connected to sleep apnea. I never thought my fear of wolves and bears were related tho! 😂 but gasping choking drowning-definitely were sleep apnea dreams for me
@barbarycorsair8473
@barbarycorsair8473 Жыл бұрын
I mentioned above that I correlated my sleep paralysis with my asthma.
@Liberté-bell
@Liberté-bell Жыл бұрын
I've experienced two episodes of "sleep paralysis ", where you wake up at night but your body is still paralysed. It's extremely frightening at the time! Interesting afterwards but scary!
@judypylant1570
@judypylant1570 Жыл бұрын
Well random..the dreams you are experiencing now are NOTHING compared to what you will experience In HELL as an Atheist!..Burn ..!
@hortonp1000
@hortonp1000 Жыл бұрын
I get that every now and then and it freaks me out each time. It's not a fun experience.
@BettyGone
@BettyGone Жыл бұрын
I’ve had that and once was blind for probably a few seconds, but seemed a long time. Very frightening. I have used CPAP for years and no longer have drowning or strangling dreams. 👏👏👏 Love your channel!
@ritanoel2828
@ritanoel2828 Жыл бұрын
I have the same. I know how scary it is.
@artspark7697
@artspark7697 Жыл бұрын
I have that too. Very scary. I don't get it unless I am overly tired.
@tdwilcox
@tdwilcox 11 күн бұрын
Just got my CPAP 5 days ago . My dreams are so mellow and refreshing now . I feel rested, and my AHI has gotten down to 2 from 37 . Love your channel .
@zenos.5315
@zenos.5315 Жыл бұрын
Had a TIA a few years ago,I was referred to a sleep clinic for study. Diagnosed with sleep apnea. Was told my sleep apnea caused my TIA. I am now on a CPAP machine and feeling 100 % better. My nightmares completely vanished . Doc your the best
@katiefromcolorado4972
@katiefromcolorado4972 Жыл бұрын
Before my sinus surgery (at 23 years old) to remove a huge polyp clogging my entire right sinus, I had so many of these types of nightmares. I’m only realizing that I don’t have them anymore from hearing you connect the dots for me. Very interesting!
@user-yv6xw7ns3o
@user-yv6xw7ns3o Жыл бұрын
I’m glad you were able to figure out what was causing it and get surgery! Similarly kinda, I had a severely narrow upper palate which caused me to have apnea and in my 30’s I finally figured that out and had upper palate widening surgery and afterward my terrible nightmares diminished so much! What a crazy feeling to live through for most of my life thinking that’s just the way I sleep.
@katiefromcolorado4972
@katiefromcolorado4972 Жыл бұрын
@@user-yv6xw7ns3o I’m very happy for you. It was truly life changing to have this surgery. I didn’t realize how miserable I was until after. The nightmares were the least of the symptoms. -Love From Colorado
@user-yv6xw7ns3o
@user-yv6xw7ns3o Жыл бұрын
@@katiefromcolorado4972 Yes! I think I can say the same about my nightmares as they were just the effects I was feeling while sleeping. The real drag of sleeping so poorly was how it affected my waking life with cognitive, emotional, physical struggles. Overall just destabilized, worn down, and so much discomfort. Did you have similar effects on your day to day life? Anyway, take care! 🖖😸❤️
@katiefromcolorado4972
@katiefromcolorado4972 Жыл бұрын
@@user-yv6xw7ns3o oh, don’t get me started. Always exhausted, depression, poor memory, weak muscles…the list goes on and on. I literally told every person I came into contact with to go see and Ear/Nose/Throat doctor for years after my surgery. I felt it that shockingly important. Take care!
@reflax6009
@reflax6009 Жыл бұрын
Where you done it?
@topowwow
@topowwow Жыл бұрын
I have obstructive sleep apnea and used to suffocate in my sleep, before I was prescribed a CPAP. The weird thing however, is that I used to have very very vivid dreams, from which I found it very difficult to wake up, that were wonderful!! I dreamt of fantastic and interesting adventures that went on and on for ages and stayed with me during the day or for several days. My friends used to tease me and tell me that I was tripping because of lack of oxygen :):) Now I use my CPAP and I still have nice and vivid dreams, though a bit scaled down. :)
@AVENTUS7777
@AVENTUS7777 Жыл бұрын
Let me borrow your CPAP machine bro
@arcticgoddess
@arcticgoddess Жыл бұрын
That's how mine are! Damn I need a CPAP machine
@barbarycorsair8473
@barbarycorsair8473 Жыл бұрын
I hope you wrote your adventures down, could be a good read😊
@smalcolm366
@smalcolm366 Жыл бұрын
Actually, that's what I had, too. I'm retired and would end up sleeping until even 1:00 in the afternoon if no one woke me up. I have centralized sleep apnea and ended up needing an APAP, a regular CPAP didn't work for me very well. Now, I wake up earlier on my own.
@ericasabine11
@ericasabine11 Жыл бұрын
I enjoy my whimsical adventure dreams… they are fewer and less memorable when using the cpap
@michaelmcfadden2397
@michaelmcfadden2397 Жыл бұрын
I've been a registered sleep technologist for 32 years, my patients complain of vivid dream recall often especially when they have sleep apnea. This is such good info, love that you shared this..thank you!
@honeybadger1847
@honeybadger1847 Жыл бұрын
I suspect you see that quite frequently in patients with narcolepsy. I’ve found many decorating, fashion, music and painting ideas in my dreams.
@suzie7413
@suzie7413 Жыл бұрын
What's the worst thing you've seen happened in patients under sedation in the OR
@michaelmcfadden2397
@michaelmcfadden2397 Жыл бұрын
@@suzie7413 hello. I work in a sleep lab, i do sleep studies on patients with suspected sleep disorders. I don't work in the OR.
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
I'm thankful for my vivid dreams that are sex related. It's the only action I ever get in my life.
@honeybadger1847
@honeybadger1847 Жыл бұрын
@@mrseddiediaz 🤣
@wheelerdealer2105
@wheelerdealer2105 Жыл бұрын
I hope there are many more doctors out there like you sir.
@ratlips4363
@ratlips4363 Жыл бұрын
I have sleep apnea and have been on a CPAP machine with a nasal pillow for about 4 years. Recently I have added O2 to my machine. My dreams are very vivid. I usually dream of flying (I have been doing out of body travel since I was a young boy), I dream of snow skiing (I have skied since I was 13), and I have dreams of roller blading (I have been rollerblading since I was about 40). Most of my dreams are of good feelings. Never confrontational and never of fear. They are always of calmness and enjoyment. My dreams of physical exertion is always of enjoyment. For me, sleep is for exploration, not escape or fear
@kat1984
@kat1984 Жыл бұрын
I've had terrifying dreams since childhood. I thought it was directly correlated to my unstable childhood with a narcissistic, alcoholic parent and another parent trying to cope with an alcoholic who wasn't nice when he was drinking and was never sober.
@redfernj2557
@redfernj2557 Жыл бұрын
My sleep apnea has gotten so much worse. I became unable to tolerate my CPAP. I knew I had become unable to exhale against the air pressure and would consistently take my mask off in my sleep. My pulmonologist said I potentially needed to change to a BiPap. I'm so glad I had another sleep study because it has been determined that I have central sleep apnea and during REM I desat down into the 40s. Apparently, I gave the technician a small heart attack with that situation. Anyway, I'm really happy to be getting all straightened out. Thank you for your videos!
@lisazappala4381
@lisazappala4381 Жыл бұрын
I’m waiting in that sleep study to explain my horrid sleep even with CPAP. I’m exhausted and plagued with nightmares. I pray I get good results like you did
@leslie-tc2po
@leslie-tc2po Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you're getting to the true problem. Just finding the diagnosis is a pain.
@user-yv6xw7ns3o
@user-yv6xw7ns3o Жыл бұрын
@@lisazappala4381 Great that you are in the process of finding the right treatment! Hang in there!
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
I can't sleep with my CPAP at all so I just don't use it. Wish there was another solution that didn't require surgery.
@maryeckel9682
@maryeckel9682 Жыл бұрын
I need to get tested again. I'm having tolerance problems and the vivid dreams (not nightmares) and not feeling rested are back. I also have PTSD, and many of my dreams relate to different traumas as challenges I eventually overcome because I lucid dream. This video has been really interesting.
@donnahamilton1843
@donnahamilton1843 Жыл бұрын
I have sleep apnea, but I wear my Cpap faithfully. My AHI is never above what's considered normal. But I've been having a lot of vivid dreams here lately! Nightmares are rare, but just the dreams are kind of annoying because it feels like I'm not resting. I also can't help but wonder about the meaning of the dreams the next day.
@aliensoup2420
@aliensoup2420 Жыл бұрын
I never looked for deep meaning of my dreams, but very often find much related to my desires and anxieties. The meanings are generally surface level things I am already aware of.
@cebruthius
@cebruthius Жыл бұрын
Look up residual RERAs.
@gloriamaryhaywood2217
@gloriamaryhaywood2217 Жыл бұрын
Even animals dream. There's Nothing mysterious or hidden messages in dreams. It's simply a way for our poor brains to sort of decompress!😜
@billieflowers1
@billieflowers1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. My husband usually wears his cpap at night but when he doesn't for a brief time, he has bad dreams. I am sending him this video! Thank you
@TokyoTigger
@TokyoTigger Жыл бұрын
I didn't know those nightmares were so common. I have OSA and while I'm overweight now, I wasn't until my 30's, and in fact was bordering on underweight until I hit puberty. My OSA wasn't identified until I was over 30, but I suspect that I've had it since before age 10 both because my dad told me I snored often as a child, and because I used to have a recurring nightmare, the exact same one, of drowning and not being able to swim to an underwater air bubble-like biome in time. I remember having this nightmare as far back as age 7. After I started consistently using a CPAP after diagnosis, I have never had that nightmare again.
@alexcisneros2980
@alexcisneros2980 Жыл бұрын
Indeed! So many people I've met had dreams like this I wonder if they went home and snored not knowing they had OSA.
@silverghostcat1924
@silverghostcat1924 Жыл бұрын
I think this is your dream state trying to tell you that you are not breathing well "suffocating" "drowning" if you will. Because a part of you is always aware while you sleep, it sometimes inserts things into your dream state to let you know what's going on in your environment. For instance, I used to dream of going to the bathroom, when I, in fact, needed to wake up and go to the bathroom. So the dreams of drowning could be serving the same purpose, to wake you up so you can breathe better. Just a thought.
@sallydavis1345
@sallydavis1345 Жыл бұрын
I am considering getting the Inspire implant. Does this work the same as the bipap concerning the rem sleep? Do you have any recommendations concerning this somewhat new device?
@plan4life
@plan4life Жыл бұрын
I have had dreams of suffocating for the past 10 years or so, since I really started to have issues with breathing at night. It must be particularly frightening to have these kind of dreams as a child though. I have developed claustrophobia since getting these dreams. Went for an MRI recently for something else (to scan my brain) and the second I went in I started to panic. I am sure years ago this would never have bothered me. 🤷‍♀️
@careran4407
@careran4407 Жыл бұрын
@@silverghostcat1924I hear my doorbell, thought I was imagining it until it happened at 9am one morning after a late night. I woke thinking who would be at the door at that time, then I remembered my daughter was being picked up at 8.30 so her lift must of been late. Only when I asked my husband the person did collect my daughter at 8.30 & never rang the bell ! Spooky
@FuzzyWuzzy75
@FuzzyWuzzy75 Жыл бұрын
I have had severe sleep apnea most all my life and am now 48. About 3 years ago, I did a sleep test and got a CPAP machine, and started seeing instant changes. It took me a long time to really get used to sleeping with a CPAP. I would (and sometimes still do) rip it off subconsciously while I sleep. At first, I would be lucky to get an hour or maybe two of sleep without ripping it off. Now, I can generally get anywhere from 4-8 hours of sleep and wake up in the morning with it on. I was so used to feeling exhausted and not good from lack of good sleep before I got the CPAP I didn't even realize what it even felt like to wake up feeling rested and have enough energy to get myself through a day without at least a little power nap. Where I really realized I had to do something was when I was driving. I started getting so sleepy while I would drive for much more than 15-20:minutes straight. I would have to start slapping myself in the face and shaking my head to keep from nodding off. One day, I was on the interstate, and I know I went about 4 miles at about 70 mph from one exit to the next and had no conscious memory of going from the one exit to the next. I drove 4 miles sound asleep at 70 mph, and that scared the crap out of me, so finally, I got the sleep study and the CPAP. Since then, I haven't had that problem anymore if I wear my CPAP. If you have sleep apnea like I do, you just can't appreciate how much better you'll feel until you actually get and use a CPAP machine. Those machines could save your life in more than one way. I don't ever recall the quick sand or drowning dreams before the CPAP machine, but I would just have some really weird yet vivid dreams that would sometimes depress the hell out of me. I would dream about dead relatives and ex-girlfriends I dated in school that I hadn't consciously thought of and almost forgot. Those dreams would just depress the hell out of me, I'd wake up in tears. I don't have those kinds of dreams anymore on the CPAP. The one dream I had that was closest to drowning was several years ago and very vivid. I remember it because it seemed so real. In that dream, I was walking down a street on a very hot, sunny day and sweating like crazy. I kept getting more and more sleepy and exhausted, and having a harder and harder time breathing, the more I walkedI walked in the dream. I saw one of these emergency care places, walked in, and started filling out the paperwork to go in the back and see the doctor. I am still soaking wet from sweat and now freezing cold and kept on feeling more and more tired and having a harder time breathing in the dream. Finally, the nurse opens the door, takes the clip board with the paperwork, and walk all the way down this long hallway and go in the last door on the right, "the doctor will be with you shortly" in the dream. The further I walk down the hall, the more exhausted I get and the less energy I have, but I am determined to get to that last room on the right. I am so exhausted and out of energy that I have to drag myself along the wall. Then I fall to my knees and crawl on my hands and knees. I keep telling myself I have to make it to that room but am running out of energy. Finally, I am doing a low crawl on the floor on my belly, trying to make it to that room, but I just can't go any further and lay my head on the ground and fall asleep. When I fell asleep in the dream, I woke up and instantly sat straight up in bed, gasping for air and in a cold sweat every bit as sweaty as I had been in the dream. That dream was so vivid and real that I would almost swear that it actually happened. I don't remember most of my dreams 5 minutes after I woke up, but I remember that one like I just had it, and it's been at least 5-10 years since I had that one. Dreams are crazy man.
@pinschrunner
@pinschrunner Жыл бұрын
My dad had sleep apnea his whole life and now one of our dogs has it. Dog has a beautiful underbite smile 🐾💖. Both snored and my dog cries out during REM. His eye muscle and vocal chords/voice/diaphragm work. Other times he runs in his sleep.
@annetteenzoulis4870
@annetteenzoulis4870 Жыл бұрын
This isn't sleep apnea. Dogs move, run, bark while in REM sleep. It's normal. ❤🐕❤💤💤💤
@pinschrunner
@pinschrunner Жыл бұрын
@@annetteenzoulis4870 my dog has a sever underbite and sleep apnea as I said.
@caymanprincessa
@caymanprincessa Жыл бұрын
Exactly! Before I was diagnosed with OSA I had a dream that I was choking on onions which woke me, feeling terrified. I reported this to my doctor and was sent for a sleep study. This is the first time I have heard a doctor make this connection between dreams and OSA. Thanks.
@lidiaziolkowski3965
@lidiaziolkowski3965 Жыл бұрын
I know what you're talking about as I have obstructive sleep apnea but I sleep in a recliner with my CPAP machine
@elliottcoleman8225
@elliottcoleman8225 Жыл бұрын
This is really interesting as someone with asthma and allergies, as well as sleep issues (I've always wanted a sleep study). I have very frequent sleep paralysis and nightmares for stress and PTSD reasons, but it is made much worse if my breathing is impaired somehow. If I wake from paralysis or a nightmare and I'm on my back, that tells me it was caused by a breathing issue. I can't breathe very well when I lay on my back. On the other hand, I haven't been known to snore. My sleep paralysis is so frequent that I've become very accustomed to my body's process of sleep. Another thing that makes it happen is when I'm too tired and I fall asleep too fast. If I'm woken up very fast by a breathing issue, the same will happen. My solution to sleep paralysis has always been to get up and wait for my brain and body to "sync up" again. If I don't do this, my brain and body will go back to a state of disequilibrium and cause even worse nightmares and paralysis. It's cool to hear someone talk about these things that I've figured out and experienced myself!
@maryeckel9682
@maryeckel9682 Жыл бұрын
Push for a sleep study!
@jamesgornall5731
@jamesgornall5731 Жыл бұрын
Yep, if I go right back to sleep after paralysis then the evil presence will be there still, like its been waiting for me to fall asleep again. When I take a break it must get bored and move off to frighten someone else
@JoeyKnifeInnovations
@JoeyKnifeInnovations Жыл бұрын
Damn. I missed the live again. Great teaching again Dr. K. I have sleep apnea but I dont remember my dreams well, I have had nighmares but I dont remember them too well. I think Im not a normal sleep apnea patient.. I dont have high blood pressure, its low 95/51 but when I have had inflammation sequences now since last year for maybe 12 times it has been secundary high, about 175-187/106 Crp has been 60-89, leucosytes 12-17 and leucosytes continue to be high, I used to have has more muscle mass and some fat tissue as well, I was 100kg but now its 83-85kg I lose weight without intention losing weight. This trauma is kinda interesting me for I just had a talk with a psykologist and she told me that I have had an alarmingly amount of intense and extreme experiences throughout my life systemically that she wanted to point out somethings after the interviews. She said, She had been doing her job as a psycologist her entire life for decades and was close to retirement already. The people she has been interviewing have gone trough a lot of bad experiences compared to "normal" people so they are not normal who she interviews normally. I didnt understand where she was going with this, so I asked her "what do you mean by all this talk?" She said that in a Gauss scale im in the extreme worst cases section, far far right and frankly speaking she said "I dont think there are many in this country that have had such an extremely rough past as you have had and survived it. When you sometimes feel bad, you should not be alarmed about it" I noticed that during the 2 times she was in a lot of mental pain as she listened to me. I think its been two weeks since that interview and I dont know what to think about it. Her words echo in my head and I didnt even have time to tell her everything. She interviewed me only 2 times out of 5 and wrote me the absolute maximum amount of therapy. I dont really know what to think about this except that she said I have had traumatic experices, so I guess it would be nice to hear about traumas and ptsd topics more.
@susanroberts
@susanroberts Жыл бұрын
Every time I get pneumonia right from when I was in grade 3 up to now, I’m 61. I get the same dream. I’m in a wear house and a machine is stacking mattresses on top of each other and then all of a sudden I’m in the middle of the mattresses and I can’t breath. It’s awful and I wake up in a sweat and I go to the Doctors the next day and they do X-rays and they can hear it as well and she confirms I have pneumonia again. Isn’t this crazy? 💝🥰
@swimfit57
@swimfit57 Жыл бұрын
I can tell when Im in sleep apnea , because I dream the same dream all night long! The doctor says that is because I’m waking up-to breath then I fall back to sleep , but I don’t realize that I woke up, 😂so I go back into the same dream. But since I lost weight like 50 to 60 lbs I don’t snore as bad! I’m a mouth breather. 😴
@susanroberts
@susanroberts Жыл бұрын
@@swimfit57 I had sleep apnea and I lost 55 pounds and the sleep apnea went away. I was so happy! I remember those dreams. So happy I don’t have it anymore. 💝🥰🤗
@psychedelicpython
@psychedelicpython Жыл бұрын
​@@susanroberts years ago a doctor put me on several medicines that caused extreme weight gain. I went from 117 pounds to 235 pounds within several months. I had agoraphobia and the doctor had no clue what he was doing. I ended up with sleep apnea. After about a year I stopped taking the medicines, my agoraphobia is gone, and I lost 50 pounds quickly. Then I stopped drinking diet beverages and lost another 40 pounds without trying, and my sleep apnea went away. I used to have really weird dreams when I had sleep apnea. Congratulations on losing 55 pounds! 🌟🎉
@gwortman3515
@gwortman3515 Жыл бұрын
​@Ursula McAndreaux its the sodium and fake sugars...terrible awful stuff for your body whether its diet or not.
@swimfit57
@swimfit57 Жыл бұрын
What a scary dream, but body is tell you to get to the doctor.
@2124walter
@2124walter Жыл бұрын
I've had some gnarly surgeries and some fabulous doctors!! They made all the difference ❤ I can listen to you all day! Thank you
@mimibassant
@mimibassant 11 ай бұрын
My dog has saved my life barking each time I have a weird snoring pattern saved me 3 times from nightmares by barking waking me up
@tdwilcox
@tdwilcox 11 күн бұрын
My little dog would do the same thing. It's funny how they know .
@herahagstoz6934
@herahagstoz6934 Жыл бұрын
My husband has awful sleep apnea and I can’t sleep either. I spend so much time being either incensed or fascinated by 1) He doesn’t wake himself up with the sounds he makes 2) trying to cultivate compassion 3) how to have the serious conversation about getting a sleep study and CPAP and 4) wondering how the lack of oxygen is affecting his life, and by proxy, mine because he literally can’t breathe while he’s asleep. I often wonder if this can truly be called “sleep” because of how much brain regulation is affected by the quality of sleep. If your brain can’t breathe and your circulation is under duress, can you actually get any real benefits from this essential process? I’m 100% sure that it affects all aspects of life and mental wellbeing. Plus I don’t think he can really recall his dreams because he only rarely shares them anymore. It’s sad. And infuriating because I have started falling asleep when he gets up now. It’s messing up my life too. Sucks.
@ontheroadwithtenzin
@ontheroadwithtenzin Жыл бұрын
Without my CPAP I have night "terrors", different from nightmares. Last week, macular hole surgery. Doctor said no worries. He used Ketamine. I felt, smelled and tasted "bananas" all the way to my heart and lungs. Doc said never heard of bananas before. When the tingling sensation hit my lungs I said, "good-bye" and was gone. I remember the ocular nerve blocks, not painful, but interesting. Then I knew I was asleep and recalld telling the doctor I was dreaming. He said hope it was a good one. I said beautiful images. Then the dream was gone and I was fully awake for the hour-long procedure. It was successful and vision is very much better.
@jeanneratterman
@jeanneratterman Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I found it very helpful for me. ❤
@LilitheAmara
@LilitheAmara Жыл бұрын
I have PTSD from an abusive parent and I have had PTSD dreams like this when I stop breathing in my sleep. It's so interesting hearing how all of this works. I taught myself to lucid dream to avoid nightmares, but it looks like taking care of my sleep apnea will knock out the remaining nightmares!
@miamoniquemb9753
@miamoniquemb9753 Жыл бұрын
Wow, I also taught myself how to lucid dream at a young age and now it all makes sense.
@Missgevious
@Missgevious Жыл бұрын
Does the lucid dreaming help you feel like you get more restful sleep?
@LilitheAmara
@LilitheAmara Жыл бұрын
@@Missgevious I feel like it does for the most part. I'm not really afraid of having a nightmare because I have ways to get out of it if I do. So the safety net has definitely helped me.
@DebNKY
@DebNKY Жыл бұрын
Wow, i have SA, and I've had the "someone's holding my head underwater" dream. Neurology is fascinating. Thank you.
@delaneyondreams
@delaneyondreams Жыл бұрын
what a refreshingly exploratory, open and perceptive mind you have, doctor! I have for 50 years studied and taught on dreaming and so often been disappointed by how an MD earned tends to scare docs AWAY from finding an efficient and practical way of tapping their powers to hep us see our life situations, problems. creative challenges MUCH more clearly, Thank you for carrying the torch of looking past the old psychiatrist tales and inherited, projected interpretations!
@liammurphy2725
@liammurphy2725 Жыл бұрын
This content gave me an explanation for my new type of 'night terrors'. They take the form of me in conversation till suddenly realising that I don't have breath enough to talk. My voice reduces to the barest whisper and I feel the horror creep over me as I suffocate. I have suffered PTSD and chronic depression all my life (67 now) and don't expect my nightmares to ever leave me, but all knowledge is power. Right?
@elusivemayfly7534
@elusivemayfly7534 Жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry, Liam. That is so scary. Praying you have a safe, peaceful sleep tonight. If you think you might have obstructive sleep apnea, it might be helpful sleeping on your side if you don’t already. You have a strong spirit ❤
@AlsAutoandAppliance
@AlsAutoandAppliance Жыл бұрын
I've had sleep apnea for quite some time but only recently was officially diagnosed (moderate) during a sleep study with 26 events in a 6 hour period and blood oxygen dropping into the low 70's. With that said, I've never experienced drowning or choking dreams but have experienced pretty severe and frequent sleep paralysis episodes. I've been on CPAP for about 3 weeks now and have not experienced SP or had any dreams. Interesting story, right about the time I was diagnosed with apnea, but still awaiting getting fitted for CPAP, I had my first colonoscopy in which they had me under light general anesthesia. After my procedure, back in recovery and while still out, the doctor asked my wife if I had sleep apnea. My wife acknowledged this and asked why. They said my breathing had to be assisted and suspected I may have apnea but wanted to make sure we knew about this so that we could get it further looked into.
@RiverWoods111
@RiverWoods111 Жыл бұрын
I found your channel a couple of weeks ago and started watching it. Like really wanting to learn from it for some unknown reason. Well, Sunday morning the 28th of May, I woke up at 6 am with an odd stomachache. The pain moves down, and then I get this sharp pain in my right lower stomach. I am an artist, so I have studied some anatomy for the purpose of being able to draw the human body correctly. I know that the appendix is in that general area. I look up google images and see that it is right in that area. Then I look up if this could be a post menopausal endometriosis flare up. It could be, and the ovaries are in that area too. I am in a lot of pain, decided to call an Urgent Care who says, "why don't you come in and let us check you out." I do that, and they send me on to ER. This whole time I am trying to convince myself I am just overreacting and there isn't anything really wrong with me. I checked in and within about 5 minutes I was taken back. I was amazed because there are people there who have clearly bashed in faces, who got there before me. I did spend a good 5 hours in ER before they came in and said, "It was exactly what they thought it was, appendicitis, and I was being moved upstairs to inpatient. At 1 am Monday morning they removed my appendix. These two really sweet southern women (I am in Georgia, but from Northern California) came in, and I am pretty sure one of them was either an anesthesiologist or a Nurse Anesthethist. One treated the other like she was of higher position in life, although that one was very down to earth and was helping the other one push the bed. I don't remember either of them really giving me anything, although if I think really hard they may have put something in my IV. I was just enjoying their company and was totally engrossed in them. I don't remember anything else after getting rolled into the operating room. I was so calm because of them, and all of your videos I had been watching. The whole time I was waiting to go to surgery, I kept telling myself that I just need to go in happy and everything will be easy. I was even giving my surgeon sh*t. When he came in to introduce himself, I asked if he was my doctor, because he looked like a doctor and not a nurse. or something else. He sounded a little offended and very kindly said, "No, he was my SURGEON!" He-he! I responded, "But doesn't being a surgeon mean you have to be a doctor?" He laughed at me and admitted, I had him on that one. When I woke up, one of the two ladies from anesthesia was talking to me about my three nice neat little incisions, and kept saying 1, 2, 3. It just seemed so cute to me for some reason! I really think it went so much easier because something in the universe led me to binge-watch a bunch of your videos. I normally go in a little freaked out because the first time I had surgery, I woke up a little too soon, and still had tubes in my nose that hurt. So I am always wanting to make sure I tell the anesthesiologist that I don't want to wake up with tubes in my nose. I never got around to telling anyone that, and just went off to a nice restful place unaware of anything and woke up with no tubes. I just wanted to say thank you! I still have no idea why I started watching your videos. Let alone why I started binge-watching them. I had no clue that I was suddenly going to wind up in the hospital needing emergency surgery, so it was such a random thing. I normally watch sailing videos.
@luzfernandez-aviles6365
@luzfernandez-aviles6365 15 күн бұрын
This was so informative. I always wondered why I have such vivid bad dreams. My son got me thinking about this, and he suggested that I look into it.
@MrYorickJenkins
@MrYorickJenkins Жыл бұрын
One learns so much with professional guys appearing on youtube. Thanks for this informative talk. I always wondered about those nightmaes where creature with violin shaped heads are after you and you cant move!
@debra45356
@debra45356 Жыл бұрын
I am in motion to be blessed with a lung transplant, and i am scared to death about the surgery. Could you "touch upon this subject" sometime? (I am currently going through sleep test too. I am told I DO have sleep apnea from my 1st sleep test.) AM I EVEN GOING TO LIVE THROUGH THIS SURGERY 😢? I NEVER EVER DREAM. WILL I WAKE UP ON A VENT? ALL THESE QUESTIONS HAVE ME IN TEARS ON & OFF DAILY. THANK YOU SO MUCH.
@beckycordell7038
@beckycordell7038 Жыл бұрын
I have central apnea. After my diagnosis, I realized that my 'falling' dreams are caused by my apnea. I realized that when a falling dream woke me, I was always at the 'bottom' of a breath, and I needed to take a breath. Unfortunately, they've not found a solution for me, as I did not tolerate any of the types of masks or methods of cpap or bipap. I'm still happy to know that I have central apnea, so that I can inform my medical care givers for any procedures I may need in the future.
@blissprokop6239
@blissprokop6239 Жыл бұрын
I was born with central slept apnea. Those sleep breathing machines won't work for us as we "forget" to take a breath when we sleep. Snoring is uncommon for our type, too.
@beckycordell7038
@beckycordell7038 Жыл бұрын
@@blissprokop6239 Good to know thank you!
@blissprokop6239
@blissprokop6239 Жыл бұрын
@Becky Cordell the mayo clinic has many articles about central sleep apnea. You might find something useful.
@saltcitysunshine
@saltcitysunshine Жыл бұрын
I thought people with central sleep apnea needed an asv machine?
@Midnight-gx7fj
@Midnight-gx7fj 5 ай бұрын
My goodness. If you can't tolerate the machine, try regular oxygen with a simple cannula on your nose. Don't kill yourself by not complying.
@lorinavrodtzke8932
@lorinavrodtzke8932 Жыл бұрын
Great live! Bummed I missed it but glad I was able to watch the video. Great info! I was diagnosed with OSA mid 2022 and I also have scarring in both lower lung lobes from covid pneumonia in April 2021. Slept in a recliner after covid because I would wake up gasping. Then stayed in the recliner because of shoulder surgery in Oct 2021. Sleep study showed pulse ox hanging around 84 during the night 😬 Baseline daytime pulse ox is 95 since covid. I was put on supplemental oxygen immediately and then it took awhile to get an appt with sleep specialist and then to get the cpap. It took quite awhile to get used to the cpap mask. Felt like I was suffocating and I think some PTSD from covid hospitalization. Since getting used to it I won't sleep without it. I do take Carvedilol and Citalopram. Didn't realize they impact REM sleep. Dreams are pretty normal now. Friends have commented on how much more "With it" I am since using the cpap. Thanks for all your info. I learned some things I didn't get from my pulmonologist/sleep specialist.
@Nicktrick87
@Nicktrick87 Жыл бұрын
My o2 gets down to the high 80s and they won’t give me o2. They keep telling me it’s fine .
@lorinavrodtzke8932
@lorinavrodtzke8932 Жыл бұрын
@@Nicktrick87 yikes. My pulmonologist said insurance would approve supplemental oxygen if a 5 minute walk around the office dropped pulse ox down to 88 which it did. It'll be a year in Aug that I'm using it.
@barrybailey1173
@barrybailey1173 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this valuable video. I suffer from nightly anxiety nightmares. I use a CPAP machine and dread going to bed each night because I know I will wake with my heart racing. I am 80 years old and still working as a massage therapist and Active Stretching instructor [I have a KZbin channel]. This is the final of several past carreers. Past carreers were VERY stressful. I have discussed my dreams at length with my therapist but that only softens the aftereffect and seems not to help prevent the anxiety dreams. The only drugs I take are a statin and baby aspirin which are prescribed because six years ago I had 3 TIAs the cause for which the doctors have no explanation. The three mini-strokes happened while I was sleeping, which is another reason I dread closing my eyes each night. Your video has helpd me tremendously to better understand what is happening to me when I sleep. Thank you!!!!!
@PureLight11
@PureLight11 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for touching on this subject. Sleep apnea adversely affected my whole family growing up My mom was born in 1927. And, she was a sleeper. As a kid, I think she must have fell asleep in school, because a saying between her and her twin. The pretty one and the sartShe fell asleep stirring soup, or driving the car. My sibling, when a kid driving with mom, would have to wake her up; Can you imagine? I'm ten years younger, so I missed a lot. I did see my mom sleep anytime she sat still throughout her life. She had a congenital heart valve defect doctors found in her 70’s (which was replaced) and I suppose they put it together that she had sleep apnea. It made a big difference in how she was thought of and how she thought of herself. She was a twin, and my aunt didn't have those problems. Mom’s nightmares were consistent all throughout growing up. I don't recall you saying, but are the nightmares the result of a lack of oxygen? Can you explain that more, or direct me to another vid, if you have one?
@ambermay7032
@ambermay7032 Жыл бұрын
This is so helpful! I always have very vivid, self aware dreams normally (quite a lot of fun) but sometimes I have long nightmares (been told I snore or even talk during) or short nightmares of choking followed by waking up coughing and choking. I have an autoimmune disease (Thankfully it is a triggered immune response and can be avoided) that can affect most parts of my body including nervous system and muscles. I knew they were linked but I didn't realize how. I can pay better attention to whats happening in my sleep and my body now.
@Missgevious
@Missgevious Жыл бұрын
Me too
@gretchenwenzel2906
@gretchenwenzel2906 Жыл бұрын
Oh my God… Thank you! My life has been a nightmare for several years now. Without getting into all of my medical stuff… I have a lot of physical pain and they’re a different medication’s that I take and at one point,several years ago, something changed. I can’t even call them nightmares. It is worse. I’m terrified to go to bed which, obviously, just exacerbates the situation. I’m sleep deprived because of it and when my body naturally wants to wake up my head is too tired to truly wake up while also in much physical pain for a very long time. I lay there in a state that I cannot explain. It is truly like some type of manic abstract place and I don’t dare keep medication next to my bed because of it because it is that bad. When I’m finally awake enough… I have to psych myself into getting up and tell myself that it’ll be better once I wake up. I simply don’t Have the language to explain how horrible it is. I’ve gotten absolutely nowhere with my doctors regarding the situation. It was bad enough that I can only sleep for a few hours at a time because of the back pain that I have. I am totally at my wits end. Of course, it affects my entire day at night.
@nicolayoung7973
@nicolayoung7973 Жыл бұрын
Stay strong my friend I believe we were meant to have this blessing tonight what a wonderful man he is ,when you feel at your lowest remember good or bad nothing lasts forever much love from the uk
@mickeysullivan1170
@mickeysullivan1170 Жыл бұрын
I’m a VA psychologist. I’ve seen so many with nocturnal panic attacks whose underlying issue was sleep apnea. Their dream content often is “colored in” around themes of being choked or suffocated. Discuss the cross-cultural, cross century tales of dreams some creature upon one’s chest.
@hippyable
@hippyable Жыл бұрын
God love you for coming on here to help us! You're a life saver! 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
@angelawoodlief7242
@angelawoodlief7242 Жыл бұрын
I work for a dentist that makes oral appliances for sleep apnea, I believe in every thing you are talking about! We have cured so many people of sleep apnea!
@mamamoats4890
@mamamoats4890 Жыл бұрын
I am curious..do your patients have a sleep study with the appliance?
@docgregg2
@docgregg2 9 ай бұрын
May I ask where your dentist practices? I would like to follow-up on the night guard for sleep apnea. Thank you. Sharon
@mmdiane
@mmdiane Жыл бұрын
I found out recently that I have moderate sleep apnea. I also had a TKR some months ago, and as I was waking up in recovery, I started saying: "I was awake during surgery. I was awake". I remember the Anesthesiologist saying: No...dont say that, you were asleep. And by the way, you have sleep apnea and need to get a sleep test done. But I never made the connection of my sleep issues and my nightmares.
@tyghe_bright
@tyghe_bright Жыл бұрын
I had severe reflux when I was first diagnosed with apnea... and the combination of the reflux (sometimes waking with it coming through my nose, or having aspirated it), in combination with the sense of drowning from the apnea had me seriously traumatized. It took several months to be able to use the biPAP without panicking. Almost never happens now (unless I fall asleep without the biPAP)
@KatherineRoseArt
@KatherineRoseArt Жыл бұрын
I get reflux that bad too... I take omeprazole everyday and it helps a TON.
@sheltiemomstefanie2564
@sheltiemomstefanie2564 Жыл бұрын
@@KatherineRoseArtif you don’t have it out. Once you get your gallbladder removed that reflux goes away. At least mine did
@IQTech61
@IQTech61 Жыл бұрын
I asked my surgeon to let me listen to the HU song during surgery. They were skeptical but agreed. Both said I went under easily, came out of anesthesia faster in recovery, and was healing faster.
@maryohara1224
@maryohara1224 Жыл бұрын
HU song? I must have missed that reference. Please clarify?
@MagpieMcGraw
@MagpieMcGraw Жыл бұрын
@@maryohara1224 Pretty sure it's a Mongolian band.
@maryeckel9682
@maryeckel9682 Жыл бұрын
Shireg Shireg puts me to sleep like a little kid!
@frenchfry14595
@frenchfry14595 6 ай бұрын
I have sleep apnea and I just started having bad dreams while sleeping. This video is so timely for me. Thank you!
@evamonroy8110
@evamonroy8110 Жыл бұрын
Dr. I learned so much from you today. I'm 58 years old when I began to use a BiPAP machine and my life has changed for the better. But because of my psychiatric condition and all of the medications that I take, I suspect that that is why I suffer from insomnia. But you were the one that enlightened me and I enjoy your program because I have had many surgeries and most of them were elective. I worked at Stanford University medical for almost 10 years and I have much respect for you. 💙
@pat4005
@pat4005 Жыл бұрын
Wow, I consider myself very lucky to not have experienced those types of bad dreams you mentioned because I have severe sleep apnea (I went for overnight testing for sleep apnea and that's what was diagnosed). I have had really awesome adventure type dreams. Really cinematic! 😊 Many times the dream continued on from where it left off the night before! But, maybe it's because of my background and work as a creative, and my love of reading adventure/SF and watching those types of fun films over the years. And yes, I've been woke up many times due to my own snoring or breathing interruption. The CPAP machine worked really well for a restful sleep and I woke up energized, but the mask was awkward and very uncomfortable, so it was difficult to get comfortable.
@topowwow
@topowwow Жыл бұрын
So I'm not the only one with sleep apnea that has fantastic adventure dreams! Cinematic is definetely the word for them! 🙂Mine don't continue from where I've left them, but I often dream of the same places, where I have new adventures. We should consider selling movie scrpits to Hollywood 😛 Thankfully I've only dreamt of suffocating a handful of times. I adjusted to my mask from the first night and have never pulled it off in the year and a half I've been using it. I'm lucky in this I guess...
@leslie-tc2po
@leslie-tc2po Жыл бұрын
I love cool dreams like that. I think it's cause your a cool person.
@mrseddiediaz
@mrseddiediaz Жыл бұрын
Ive never been able to fall asleep with the CPAP like I used to so I never use it.
@pat4005
@pat4005 Жыл бұрын
@@leslie-tc2po🥰
@pat4005
@pat4005 Жыл бұрын
@@topowwow❤ That’s awesome! Yes, I have seriously thought about writing scripts too. I would love to make storyboard presentations and mock-up movie posters illustrated like they were back in the 80’s. I have mapped-out a graphic novel and action-adventure novel (which I’ve had to set aside while I do other creative work to pay the bills), but it’s great to draw upon the adventurous dreams for inspiration!
@Stormlaughter
@Stormlaughter Жыл бұрын
Good heavens, doctor, this is amazing! After snoring like a lumberjack since I was a baby, I finally got a sleep study and a CPAP back in January. For about three months now, my dreaming has improved! I used to dream feature-length motion pictures but as my snoring got worse, so did my dreaming. It's all coming back now and who'd have ever guessed that it was sleep apnea related! Thank you for this!
@Repdem
@Repdem Жыл бұрын
Exercises to reduce sleep apnea: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gn_FgZulnLKHsK8si=_t8y4rcnppBYdz7a kzbin.info/www/bejne/rX_WlIRpl6yrhM0si=Zo1QVs4UCp0ijwk5 kzbin.info/www/bejne/enjVqGdtfL6qfJIsi=8OSIMEmnrzh0ElQH
@lalaj5831
@lalaj5831 Жыл бұрын
All my life I had terrible nightmares that I was being crushed, buried alive, squeezed by unseen monsters, etc. It wasn’t until my early 30s that I realized it was sleep apnea. I watched a documentary on free diving that described the sensations of running out of air. It was definitely an “ah ha” moment. After that, whenever I would start to have one of those nightmares, I would recognize it in my dream and wake up.
@meldog7925
@meldog7925 Жыл бұрын
This video is so helpful. Thatn you fir addressing this issue. My husband just had heart surgery and is suffering terrible. He has all these symptoms and the doctors are not acknowledging it. We know what is going on now thanks to this video.
@Jabbo83
@Jabbo83 Жыл бұрын
This is my 2 video of yours and I have to say I’m hooked I love the way you teach look forward to more of your videos keep up the good work
@anniathome
@anniathome Жыл бұрын
Thank you for mentioning the PTSD correlation with nightmares. I’ve had really scary nightmares my whole life, and I felt totally freaked out by some of them. I wouldn’t ever compare my feelings of PTSD with that of a soldier who actually experienced violent war, but these violent nightmares certainly have made a lasting dent in my personal mental health. I’m always very careful what I watch or read because anything even slightly violent or scary will come back to haunt me at night. When I have come out of surgery, I always feel like I’m coming out of a nightmare, screaming in panic for Jesus and my husband, the doctors tell me. And lo and behold, I was recently diagnosed with moderate sleep apnea. Makes a lot of sense. Thank you. I have learned a lot from you.
@Missgevious
@Missgevious Жыл бұрын
You sound similar to me :( Have you tried CPAP yet?
@anniathome
@anniathome Жыл бұрын
@@Missgevious Yes. I had a sleep study done, and I should be getting one soon.
@danettehartsock6366
@danettehartsock6366 Жыл бұрын
I was diagnosed with sleep apnea in 1998 and have loved having a c-pap since then. I have known many people who had the sleep study then when their machine was delivered, they wouldn't use it. It has made such a difference in the way I feel. If I go anywhere over night it goes with me. Even to the hospital, because I prefer my mask. Thank you for doing this video.
@lorimav
@lorimav Жыл бұрын
It really annoys me that people get fitted for a machine but complain about it and don't use it. Change your dang attitude and just use the thing already! When their weight or medication changes, okay, then go back and get a new sleep study maybe they won't need it in the future. In the meantime they are cutting their lifespans short and decreasing their quality of life by not using the thing.
@anglerandy5736
@anglerandy5736 Жыл бұрын
My AHI and central has gotten wore since getting my resmed 11. My blood oxygen is dropping less tho
@danettehartsock6366
@danettehartsock6366 Жыл бұрын
AMEN!
@tay-dor7147
@tay-dor7147 Жыл бұрын
I have pretty severe apnea (woke up 85 times an hour during my sleep study and blood oxygen dropped to 9%) but never had any nightmares. Fortunately I'm going much better sleepwise with my CPAP and having lost a bunch of weight.
@TheJratz7
@TheJratz7 3 ай бұрын
9%? Pretty sure youd be dead lol. Mine got to 76%
@tay-dor7147
@tay-dor7147 3 ай бұрын
@@TheJratz7 It sure surprised the heck out of me. But yeah, I felt like a zombie. The only way I felt really awake was lots of caffeine.
@EagleMitch
@EagleMitch Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I have an ACL replacement surgery coming up in about 5 weeks and I have sleep apnea and I appreciate seeing this.
@MedicalSecrets
@MedicalSecrets Жыл бұрын
I'm wishing you the best 🙏
@EagleMitch
@EagleMitch Жыл бұрын
@@MedicalSecrets Thanks, I appreciate it!
@sytycd789
@sytycd789 11 ай бұрын
Thank you VERY much for making this educational video. I've been having these terrible, stressful nightmares for decades and didn't know why all of them are terrible, I had no idea their link to my sleep issues. I can't thank you enough for shining a light to their source, now I can get aid.
@susanne.mcmillan
@susanne.mcmillan Жыл бұрын
Once I realized I didn't just have random nightmares about drowning and all the many other fine ways to die when you run out of air - but that I actually have Sleep Apnea - everything changed for me. I somehow learned to recognize the dreams for what they are, and started to wake myself up early before it got critical. I now rarely go into a full blown apnea attack. I wake myself pretty much at the start.
@rubyhenderson1168
@rubyhenderson1168 Жыл бұрын
Same here.
@notsogreen
@notsogreen Жыл бұрын
But is it you or your brain detecting low oxygen that actually wakes you up?
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