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The relationship between Sleep Apnea and Depression

wp:image {"id":3643,"sizeSlug":"large"} /wp:image wp:paragraph With so much talk and attention towards depression and other mental illnesses, do you ever wonder if you may have depression along with sleep apnea? /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph While it’s not often the case, it is indeed possible, as the two have a very strong connection to each other. Studies have looked further into this for years, and found that some symptoms of depression can indeed apply to sleep apnea symptoms, and vice versa. Insomnia or just having trouble sleeping in general is a strong symptom of depression, however, it does not always relate to sleep apnea.   /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph Interestingly enough, a lot of sleep specialists find that people with untreated sleep apnea tend to have symptoms of depression; therefore they screen for depression in their patients, and even treat it in some cases. A recent study done in Australia determined that for those sleep apnea sufferers that had depression symptoms, treating the sleep apnea found that those symptoms lessened significantly over time. /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph While it is true that some symptoms of sleep apnea have a strong link to clinical depression, it doesn’t always mean that you actually have it, there are a lot more symptoms to depression than just having trouble sleeping at night. /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph Want to know exactly how close the symptoms of depression and sleep apnea really are? Check out the table below and see what similarities between the two you can find: /wp:paragraph wp:table Depression symptoms      /wp:table wp:paragraph As different as they are, some of the symptoms sound very closely related, right? /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph Mental illness of any kind is never something to look past. Be sure to speak to your doctor if you think you have either depression or untreated sleep apnea.   /wp:paragraph

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