Dog and sleep apnea
Dog and sleep apnea
My husband has sleep apnea and wears his cpap machine at night. He often falls asleep on his recliner while watching TV. Our dog keeps waking him up during his naps on the recliner. Can dogs know when you stop breathing to alert you? Our dog has had no training at all. Has anyone experienced this before? Please enlighten us.
Thank you
Thank you
Re: Dog and sleep apnea
I've heard stories of things like that, people who said their pet kept waking them up licking their face or something and then the pet died, and they started feeling worse, and were diagnosed with sleep apnea..Tahmalees wrote:My husband has sleep apnea and wears his cpap machine at night. He often falls asleep on his recliner while watching TV. Our dog keeps waking him up during his naps on the recliner. Can dogs know when you stop breathing to alert you? Our dog has had no training at all. Has anyone experienced this before? Please enlighten us.
Thank you
so, it's entirely possible.
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- chunkyfrog
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
They train dogs to alert to epilepsy and diabetes.
Some dogs seem to have trained themselves.
Some dogs seem to have trained themselves.
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Yep. My friend's 4 year old daughter was recently diagnosed with T1 diabetes and is now on an insulin pump. Of course, this includes ongoing vigilance against not only the highs that everyone knows about, but deadly lows as well. Their family dog has designated himself as her "helper dog". He alerts her parents every time he senses a low, and he's never been wrong yet. It's really crazy how animals do that!chunkyfrog wrote:They train dogs to alert to epilepsy and diabetes.
Some dogs seem to have trained themselves.
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Dogs often train themselves to alert their owners before they have seizures, low blood sugar, and several other medical conditions. It's amazing how well they can be tuned in to humans.
Of course, dogs are often clueless or alert for something entirely unimportant.
The dog could also be reacting to snoring, not actual apnea.
Try napping on the recliner with the CPAP and see if the dog leaves him alone. Take the water tank out before moving the CPAP machine.
BTW, napping without CPAP is bad for you. Not as bad as going all night without it, but still something to avoid.
Of course, dogs are often clueless or alert for something entirely unimportant.
The dog could also be reacting to snoring, not actual apnea.
Try napping on the recliner with the CPAP and see if the dog leaves him alone. Take the water tank out before moving the CPAP machine.
BTW, napping without CPAP is bad for you. Not as bad as going all night without it, but still something to avoid.
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- Captain_Midnight
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Can dogs know when you stop breathing to alert you?
What an interesting question.
And, giving it a moment's thought, yes; I think they do both.
Had a Bernese Mountain dog (Rita) and back before diagnosis, and she would routinely wake me when I fell asleep in the recliner. I hadn't considered it before; however, she must have sensed my breathing difficulties (which I did not, at the time) and took charge of the situation.
Sadly, we lost Rita to the widespread malamine contamination of doggie food from chinese sources back in 2007(or so).
.
What an interesting question.
And, giving it a moment's thought, yes; I think they do both.
Had a Bernese Mountain dog (Rita) and back before diagnosis, and she would routinely wake me when I fell asleep in the recliner. I hadn't considered it before; however, she must have sensed my breathing difficulties (which I did not, at the time) and took charge of the situation.
Sadly, we lost Rita to the widespread malamine contamination of doggie food from chinese sources back in 2007(or so).
.
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
I think your story was one of the ones I remember having read.Captain_Midnight wrote: Had a Bernese Mountain dog (Rita) and back before diagnosis, and she would routinely wake me when I fell asleep in the recliner. I hadn't considered it before; however, she must have sensed my breathing difficulties (which I did not, at the time) and took charge of the situation.
.
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Accounts to put on the foe list: dataq1, clownbell, gearchange, lynninnj, mper!?, DreamDiver, Geer1, almostadoctor, sleepgeek, ajack, stom, mogy, D.H., They often post misleading, timewasting stuff.
- zoocrewphoto
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
palerider wrote:I've heard stories of things like that, people who said their pet kept waking them up licking their face or something and then the pet died, and they started feeling worse, and were diagnosed with sleep apnea..Tahmalees wrote:My husband has sleep apnea and wears his cpap machine at night. He often falls asleep on his recliner while watching TV. Our dog keeps waking him up during his naps on the recliner. Can dogs know when you stop breathing to alert you? Our dog has had no training at all. Has anyone experienced this before? Please enlighten us.
Thank you
so, it's entirely possible.
I had a cat who would fuss with my face, and I finally realized he was probably curious when I was making odd sounds. Once I woke up and sounded normal, he would leave. I decided he was probably helping me avoid my choking / gasping fits. I knew I had sleep apnea, but I didn't realize it was the cause of my high blood pressure. I also thought the choking fits were caused by gerd, but it was probably related to the sleep apnea. I don't have them anymore unless I fall asleep without my machine.
Anyway, after Chase (the cat) died, I started having a lot more choking fit, several a week. Some really bad nights. I realized just how much he had been helping me. He couldn't stop the apnea events of course, but he was waking me up before the choking events, and those would burn my throat, and sometimes, I would inhale it and then gargle as I breathed. I would sit up for hours as it hurt to breath and swallow. My current kitties are all very sweet, but they don't do much to help me. They probably just think I purr with a strange accent.
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Or you are speaking a language the animal doesn't understand?!zoocrewphoto wrote:They probably just think I purr with a strange accent.
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Hi first time poster
The other morning while I was sleeping my dog woke me up he was up around my pillow sniffing does this mean I stop breathing
The other morning while I was sleeping my dog woke me up he was up around my pillow sniffing does this mean I stop breathing
Re: Dog and sleep apnea
Ask him, dogs are honest, he will tell you! Do you have symptoms, night sweats, waking up with a jolt, potty breaks many times a night. The list is almost endless. JimGuest wrote:Hi first time poster
The other morning while I was sleeping my dog woke me up he was up around my pillow sniffing does this mean I stop breathing
Use data to optimize your xPAP treatment!
"The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease." Voltaire
"The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease." Voltaire
- ChicagoGranny
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Re: Dog and sleep apnea
That, or you have bacon drippings on your pillow.Guest wrote:Hi first time poster
The other morning while I was sleeping my dog woke me up he was up around my pillow sniffing does this mean I stop breathing
Re: Dog and sleep apnea
I completely believe it! Recently I have been narcoleptic and snoring growing louder and louder as I am told each time I fall asleep again. I was diagnosed with sleep apnea years ago but I didn't believe it as I had none of tuese symptoms to my knowledge. However I recently suffered a bout of pneumonia and my breathing has been noticeably different - worse. I fell asleep midday to find my 8 mo old puppy had scratched me and was currently biting me - nothing to break the skin but seemed deperate to wake me up. My daughter told me I had started snoring very loudly and suddenly stopped. People may disagree but they do not know this dog. He has NEVER shown aggression, biting, scratching ... He was fine once I woke yp. I know he saved my life.
Re: Dog and sleep apnea
I absolutely believe you... they're amazing and wonderful!
Re: Dog and sleep apnea
I surely hope that you will finally take your dog's advice and do something about your sleep apnea NOW!RoseyBasil wrote:I completely believe it! Recently I have been narcoleptic and snoring growing louder and louder as I am told each time I fall asleep again. I was diagnosed with sleep apnea years ago but I didn't believe it as I had none of tuese symptoms to my knowledge. However I recently suffered a bout of pneumonia and my breathing has been noticeably different - worse. I fell asleep midday to find my 8 mo old puppy had scratched me and was currently biting me - nothing to break the skin but seemed deperate to wake me up. My daughter told me I had started snoring very loudly and suddenly stopped. People may disagree but they do not know this dog. He has NEVER shown aggression, biting, scratching ... He was fine once I woke yp. I know he saved my life.
Have a sleep study done and get a good, data-capable machine to monitor your therapy.