Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)—a treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)—can also reduce nighttime coughing, wheezing, and heartburn according to a study published in ERJ Open Research.

CPAP is offered to people with OSA, but the new research suggests that the treatment may bring extra benefits.

“When we experience heartburn or acid reflux, we are feeling stomach acid traveling up toward the throat. People with obstructive sleep apnea are three times more likely to suffer regularly with nighttime heartburn. Respiratory symptoms, such as coughing and wheezing, are also more common,” says lead study author professor Thorarinn Gislason, MD, from the department of sleep at Landspitali – The National University Hospital of Iceland in Reykjavík, in a release. 

Gislason and his colleagues used data from the Icelandic Sleep Apnea Cohort study, including 822 patients diagnosed with moderate to severe OSA. Before starting CPAP treatment, the patients took part in an overnight sleep study and answered detailed sleep questionnaires, including whether they had heartburn or belching at night. 

Two years after beginning CPAP treatment, participants returned for a follow-up visit with a new evaluation. Researchers were also able to measure how regularly each person used CPAP via data stored by the CPAP machines. 

The study showed that people who were regularly using the CPAP machines were around 42% less likely to experience night-time heartburn, compared to those who used the machines a little or not at all. This decrease in reflux among CPAP users seemed to result in more than a four-fold decrease in the risk of productive morning cough and almost a four-fold decrease in the risk of chronic bronchitis.

Regular CPAP users were also less likely to suffer with wheezing, but the data suggests this was a direct result of the treatment, rather than being caused by the reduction in night-time reflux.

Researchers say that because CPAP treatment keeps the upper airway open during sleep, this probably helps the valve between the stomach and the food pipe to keep closed, which could stop acid from leaking out of the stomach. 

“Obstructive sleep apnea is a common condition, and, although we have good ways to diagnose and treat it, many people do not realize they have this problem,” Gislason says in the release. “I’m 71 years old, and I have been a specialist lung doctor all my working life. I have seen many patients with recurrent respiratory symptoms who have been diagnosed with OSA and recovered when they got CPAP treatment. 

“Snoring, frequent waking, and day-time tiredness are established signs of OSA. This study suggests that coughing and wheezing that do not get better with the usual treatments and night-time reflux should also be considered as possible signs of OSA that may require CPAP treatment.”

Professor Winfried Randerath, head of the European Respiratory Society’s assembly on sleep-disordered breathing, who was not involved in the research, says in a release, “OSA may manifest as loud snoring at night and daytime sleepiness, but research is showing that its effects can be widespread and serious. This study adds to our understanding of the risks of OSA, but it also shows how using CPAP treatment can help to reduce those risks.

“People who think they may have OSA should speak to their doctor. Those who have been diagnosed and offered CPAP treatment should try to use the machine regularly as we are learning more and more about the health benefits that CPAP can bring.”

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