What is sleep apnea?
When you have sleep apnea, the air stops flowing to your lungs for 10 seconds or longer – that is, you actually stop breathing.
Sensing you have stopped breathing, a control centre in your brain triggers you to wake up just enough to take a breath. Then you fall back to sleep and the cycle begins again. In some people, this can happen over 30 times every hour even though you may not remember waking up.4
As you can imagine, constantly being triggered back into breathing, hour after hour, night after night, can put a strain on your body.
You may feel very tired day after day yet not realise that you have been waking up so many times at night as a result of having sleep apnea.