dismiss

Webinar : L'évolution du service de l'équipement /Apprenez plus/registre

Other Headlines

Leading job search engine provides notable data.
The American College of Radiology announced it will be among the first to apply for authority to accredit freestanding diagnostic imaging centers as required by new CMS rules.
Future-focused performance management system prepares hospital leaders for the changing health care environment.
Honor bestowed at the 28th International Congress on Applications of Lasers and Electro-Optics (ICALEO®).
Workgroup advises the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC).

Have News for Us?

Submit your news on the industry, people, or companies.

Forward to a Friend

More People & Company Headlines

Chairman Rockefeller Sends Open Letter to CIGNA on Insurance Practices Letter critical of industry medical loss ratio information.

ASTRO: Hologic MammoSite Radiation Therapy Keeps Cancer From Recurring Breast cancer patients treated with Hologic's MammoSite radiation therapy system experienced less than a 4% rate of recurring cancer after five years.

TriMedx to Join Pre-RSNA Webinar on Equipment Service -- You're Invited to Attend "The Evolution of Equipment Service: How to Navigate Through Tough Financial Times" will be hosted by DOTmed on Nov. 18th. Sponsored by ReMedPar.

This Month in Medical History: Facing the World Again A face transplant transformed surgery in November 2005.

MEDICA 2009 Preview The 41st World Forum for Medicine International Trade Fair with Congress will be held November 18-21, 2009 in Dusseldorf, Germany.

Stryker Biotech and Management Charged With Fraudulent Marketing Scheme Company accused of promoting unauthorized mixture of OP-1 and Calstrux for invasive surgeries.

Merck and Schering-Plough Merge Second recent blockbuster pharma fuse.

Focus on Performance: What to Do About Regulation? A columnist weighs in from DOTmed Business News.

Recall: Cordis CROSSOVER Sheath Introducer Attention: Interventional radiological healthcare professionals, hospital risk managers.

Leasing as the Bridge over Troubled Waters Credit crunch leads to looking at leasing options for practices.

Zzoma device is
worn like a belt

Experimental Sleep Apnea Device Offers Alternative to CPAP

For some, a full night's rest can be anything but restful. That's because they have sleep apnea, which causes them to struggle for breath in bouts throughout the night. Six percent of the population is affected by the condition--but many don't even know they have it.

"They don't make the connection between the fact that they snore loudly at night and they complain about being tired during the day," says Samuel Krachman, D.O., professor of medicine and director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Temple University School of Medicine and Hospital. "They think that they're just tired, not getting enough sleep or just working too hard. But in reality, it's related to the sleep apnea."

Krachman is leading research on an experimental device to help patients who suffer from positional sleep apnea. Positional sleep apnea refers to patients who have episodes where they stop breathing when they're on their back, but when they are on their side, the abnormal breathing resolves.

Fifty percent of patients with mild sleep apnea (those who experience anywhere from five to 15 events an hour) and 20 percent of people with moderate sleep apnea (15 to 30 events an hour) have positional sleep apnea. Krachman explains how wearing the device, called Zzoma, works to reduce those episodes.

"Zzoma is a device which is worn around the chest area like a belt, with a device on the back, which is a firm, foam material wrapped in canvas to keep people from moving on their backs. Over the last year, we've been studying its use in treating patients with mild to moderate positional sleep apnea."

The device was created by former Temple Fellow Joseph G. Crocetti. He and Krachman have worked together to treat positional sleep apnea. Their research has shown that the Zzoma device is less obtrusive and easier to use than the leading alternative, a continuous positive airway pressure machine or CPAP, a mask that blows air on a person's face to keep the airway open.

"Although CPAP is very effective, the best studies have shown it's only used correctly 50 percent of the time," says Krachman. "That leaves many diagnosed with sleep apnea but not treated."

Untreated sleep apnea can lead to a host of other medical problems. Just having sleep apnea is an independent risk factor for developing high blood pressure, coronary disease and heart failure. That's why Krachman hopes the FDA approves Zzoma to treat positional sleep apnea, to give sufferers an effective alternative to the burden of CPAP.

For more information on the Temple Sleep Disorders Center, call 215-707-8163.

Report by Megan Chiplock, Temple University.

Interested in Medical Industry News? Subscribe to DOTmed's weekly news email and always be informed. Click here, it takes just 30 seconds.

Please Send us your Comments.

Printable Story
Access and use of this site is subject to the terms and conditions of our LEGAL NOTICE & PRIVACY NOTICE
Property of and Proprietary to DOTmed.com, Inc. Copyright ©2001-2009 DOTmed.com, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED