When I was in about 21, I got hit in the face with a baseball,
hard. Hard enough to break my jaw, the orbital bone in my cheek and my
nose.
They immediately wired my jaw shut for weeks. Then when
the swelling went down they re-set the nose and I had a splint for a few
weeks.
Flash forward a couple of years and my jaw catches and won't open and I brux like mad.
I then have jaw surgery. Fixes the catching but does nothing for the bruxing or alignment.
A few years later I break my nose but it just requires some tape, ice and aspirin.
All this time, I am a runner. 5k's, 10k's, a few 1/2 marathons. Love to run. And to mix things up, I ride a bike.
A
few years later, I suffer a horrible fall and sprain the back and tear
the shoulder muscles and rotator cuff. Can't exercise better part of a
year.
Fell better start to run again. Things are good for about 5
years, then while running in the dark on a dirt road, I step in a hole
and tear up my knee.
A quick scope and off and running for about 7 years. then the knee starts to bother me, and I can't run as long.
Then I fall in love and for a few years we are living together.
I wake up tired and can't focus and get sleepy driving. I think, I have an erratic shift so my sleep is not constant.
I have a girlfriend who likes to stay up. She complains that I snore,
loud. So I make an appointment with a ENT, I am diagnosed with sleep
apnea.
I am at that time about 41-43 years old. I get a c-pap
machine and hate it. Opt for septoplasy surgery which does not help, and
still use the c-pap machine.
Because I was in the Army, I
traveled from base to base, going from a humid moldy place like South
Caroline, Georgia and Virginia to humid and dusty Texas, to Utah and
Idaho. And I suffered from chronic sinusitis and rhinositis.
After my second knee surgery, my running days were over. My work
schedule was still crazy, now that I retired from the military, I had a
desk job and worked long hours.
I gained weight at an alarming rate. Going from 130 -190 in 3 years.
I
have been retired from the Army for 12 years, and would like to know if
it would be consistent with medical knowledge that a broken jaw that
has alignment issues, a deviated septum, chronic sinusitis and
rhinositis could be what contributed to me having sleep apnea.
The weight gain didn't happen until after the diagnosis.
Now that I am getting older, post menopausal, and sleep is just harder
to both fall and stay asleep, the apnea just makes it that much worse. I
am tired all the time. But I need to find a doctor in Utah, who just
won't say lose weight. Duh, yes I would love to, but I was diagnosed
before I gained weight and a bad knee, shoulder and tired makes it
really hard to find an exercise that I can fit in my schedule.
Any suggestions?
Thank you
===
Weight Increase
Hi Cyndee,
I completely empathise with you and fully understand the frustration you are going through.
Your concern about your weight is a very interesting one to me. You say the weight gain
didn't
happen until after the diagnosis. Correct me if I'm wrong but by what
I read, you were diagnosed with Sleep Apnea, commenced using a CPAP
machine and then your weight began to increase alarmingly.
The reason I need to clarify this sequence of events is that your
experiences and my own appear to be running parallel. When I commenced
using CPAP machine, my weight increased expedientially, I was diagnosed
morbidly obese at 130kg and ended up having surgery to reduce my
weight. I strongly believe there is a link between using a CPAP machine
and gaining weight at an alarming rate.
I would be very grateful if you could take the time to respond so I can be assured that I have events in the right sequence.
The
more I find out about Sleep Apnea the more I realise what a dangerous
sleeping giant it is. I'm sorry I can't address your other issues but I
will be following to read the responses. Like I said the situations in
our lives are running parallel. Like you I was in the Army and like you I
have suffered many anatomical injuries. But my greatest interest is
the link between using CPAP and immense weight gain.
Good luck and I'll follow the responses you receive.
Cheers Michelle