Something I came across just yesterday is that *sleep apnoea* is being found to be connected to deposits of fibrinogen in the body.
The former designation "fibrositis" appears to be called fibromyalgia today.
Some have said that their fibromyalgia improved once they got their sleep apnoea treated.
One kind is obstructive sleep apnoea where the passages become blocked.
Another is central, where the brain doesn't tell the body to breathe for long periods during the night. The rising levels of carbon dioxide raise the alarm, and the body wakes up a bit, even if the sufferer doesn't remember it, and they breathe again. The low oxygen brings about all manner of symptoms. Another great mimicker of diseases.
Just one more problem.

The guai treatment is meant to shift deposits of calcium phosphate deposited here and there in the body.
Magnesium might help that one.

http://www.respiratoryreviews.com/sep02/rr_sep02_AHIndex.html
Researchers are also evaluating the usefulness of measuring fibrinogen concentrations, which are often elevated in the morning in patients with SDB. Others are looking at sleep apnea–induced changes in the levels of circulating and cellular mediators and in cellular adhesion molecules.

the*sleep*site.com/content/view/42/50/
And a recent investigation found /SLEEP APNEA/ in 80% of /fibromyalgia/ victims. /Sleep apnea/ fragments sleep, thereby reducing slow wave sleep

Also google fibromyalgia sleep apnoea

diabetes and sleep apneoa is also a search that would interest some


R





On 14/12/2012 10:06 AM, Simonsen, John wrote:
real bad cases of fibromyalgia


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