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Sleep Apnea in NewbornBy:
Our three-week-old daughter is having brief periods of sleep apnea. She is currently on an apnea monitor during sleep. How "normal" is this and is there anything else we can do?
Noelle
Apnea means no breath. Your daughter has apnea of the newborn, a condition that is not rare but is certainly not "normal." Apnea of the newborn is most commonly associated with prematurity and is most common in very premature infants.
Aside from prematurity, there are a number of conditions associated with apnea of the newborn. Gastroesophageal reflux disease ("bubbling up" of stomach acid and digestive enzymes into the throat), infection, anemia and hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) are treatable causes of newborn apnea. Other causes include intracranial hemorrhage and a history of seizures. Needless to say, every effort should be made to identify treatable causes of newborn apnea.
Apnea is often classified as central, obstructive or mixed. Central apnea occurs when the infant's central nervous system fails to send the appropriate "breathing orders" to the respiratory muscles. In obstructive apnea, the orders are given, but the infant cannot breathe due to anatomical airway obstruction. In toddlers and older children, this is often due to enlarged tonsils and adenoids, but in neonates (newborns) the obstruction is often due to the poor muscle tone of the airway musculature. Thus obstructive apnea, too, is a form of neurologic immaturity. Mixed apnea is a combination of central and obstructive apnea.
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