According to a study carried out by Netzer, Eliasson and Strohl, low levels of sex hormones in women are associated with sleep apnea or sleep-disordered breathing. The investigators studied 53 women ranging in age form 24 to 72, measuring their sleep and breathing patterns and hormonal levels (determined from blood samples). They found that women who had the lowest amounts of the hormones progesterone and astradiol had the most acute sleep apnea.
Eichling and Sani conclude that estrogen is a central factor in restful sleep, but other reports have found that progesterone is just as vital a factor. In the report “Effects of progesterone on sleep,” the authors describe progesterone as a hormone that plays an important role in several bodily processes, including sleep quality and respiration. The hormone has a sedative affect and strongly stimulates respiration.
Women who are experiencing low progesterone levels due to menopause may want to discuss a form of estrogen or progesterone therapy with their doctors in order to improve their sleeping patterns. |
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Sources:
• Lamberg, Lynne. “Menopause Not Always to Blame for Sleep Problems in Midlife Women.” JAMA. 2007;297:1865-1866. Vol. 297 No. 17, May 2, 2007.
• Eichling PS, Sahni J. “Menopause related sleep disorders.” J Clin Sleep Med. 2005 Jul 15;1(3):291-300.
• D'Ambrosio C, Stachenfeld NS, Pisani M, Mohsenin V. “Sleep, breathing, and menopause: the effect of fluctuating estrogen and progesterone on sleep and breathing in women.” Gend Med. 2005 Dec;2(4):238-45.
• Andersen ML, Bittencourt LR, Antunes IB, Tufik S. “Effects of progesterone on sleep: a possible pharmacological treatment for sleep-breathing disorders?” Curr Med Chem. 2006;13(29):3575-82.
• Netzer NC, Eliasson AH, Strohl KP. “Women with sleep apnea have lower levels of sex hormones.” Sleep Breath. 2003 Mar;7(1):25-9.
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