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Sleep Apnea Therapy Improves Golf Game
Reported November 05, 2009
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Sleep apnea sufferers may have some more
motivation to wear their breathing machines at night … it could improve
their golf game.
Golfers with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) who received nasal positive
airway pressure (NPAP) for their disorder lowered their golf handicaps by as
much as three strokes.
"More so than many sports, golf has a strong intellectual component, with
on-course strategizing, focus, and endurance being integral components to
achieving good play," Marc L. Benton, M.D., of Atlantic Sleep and Pulmonary
Associates in Madison, N.J., was quoted as saying. "OSA can lead to daytime
sleepiness, fatigue, and cognitive impairment -- all side effects which can
negatively impact a person's ability to golf to the best of one's ability."
Dr. Benton and colleague Neil S. Friedman, R.N., from Morristown Memorial
Hospital, evaluated the impact of NPAP on the golf handicap index (HI) of 12
golfers with diagnosed moderate to severe OSA. HI was recorded upon study
entry, as was the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS). After 20 rounds of golf
while receiving NPAP treatment over a period of 3 to 5 months, the treatment
group demonstrated a significant drop in average HI. Patients in the study
group also improved their ESS scores. A control group of 12 subjects
demonstrated no change in HI, ESS score, or SQ score during this study.
"As any golfer knows, when your ability to think clearly or make good
decisions is compromised, the likelihood of playing your best is greatly
diminished," Dr. Benton said. "Through treatment with NPAP, we can improve
many cognitive metrics, such as attention span, memory, decision-making
abilities, and frustration management, which may, in turn, positively affect
a person's golf game."
Dr. Benton estimates there are 1 to 3 million regular golfers who play 10 or
more rounds per year, and who have OSA. Most are undiagnosed or untreated.
Proper treatment is only effective if it is used regularly. In men, studies
have reported compliance rates as low as 40 percent. Patients cite many
reasons for noncompliance with NPAP, including discomfort, inconvenience,
cost, noise, or embarrassment. In the current study, nearly all patients in
the treatment group had a compliance rate of above 90 percent.
"Providers typically attempt to maximize compliance with NPAP by promoting
its medical benefits or warning patients of the risks involved in not being
treated, but this approach does not always work," Dr. Benton said. "In the
case of this study, the possibility of improving one's ability to play golf
appears to have been a significant motivation to improve treatment
compliance."
SOURCE: Presented at the scientific assembly of the American College of
Chest Physicians, San Diego, CA, October 31 to November 5, 2009 |