Obstructive Sleep Apnea Stocks List

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jun 14 TEVA Teva accuses Corcept of monopolizing the market for Korlym
Jun 14 RMD Is Mind Medicine MindMed (MNMD) Outperforming Other Medical Stocks This Year?
Jun 14 RMD BrainsWay (BWAY) to Advance in DEEP TMS for MDD With New Trial
Jun 14 RMD Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) Advances in GenAI Technology With RevelAi
Jun 14 RMD Thermo Fisher's (TMO) New Launch Supports Full Lab Automation
Jun 13 TEVA Teva sues Corcept over mifepristone 'monopoly' for rare disorder
Jun 13 RMD Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) to Broaden Knee Surgery Line With New Alliance
Jun 13 RMD Haemonetics (HAE) Banks on Growing Plasma Arm, Innovation
Jun 13 RMD Neogen's (NEOG) MDS Secures New Contract From USDA FSIS
Jun 13 LIVN An Intrinsic Calculation For LivaNova PLC (NASDAQ:LIVN) Suggests It's 31% Undervalued
Jun 12 INSP Inspire Medical Systems: A Post Q1 Assessment
Jun 12 TEVA Teva asthma inhaler patents are 'improperly listed' in FDA Orange Book
Jun 12 RMD Illumina (ILMN) Advances in NGS With DRAGEN v4.3 Launch
Jun 12 RMD Abbott's (ABT) AVEIR DR Leadless Pacemaker System Gains CE Mark
Jun 12 RMD Abbott (ABT) Gets FDA Nod for Two Glucose Monitoring Systems
Jun 12 VVOS Vivos Therapeutics Closes $7.5 Million At-The-Market Private Equity-Backed Investment and Launches Strategic Marketing and Distribution Alliance
Jun 11 RMD Insider Sale: CFO Brett Sandercock Sells Shares of ResMed Inc (RMD)
Jun 11 TEVA Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited (TEVA) Goldman Sachs 45th Annual Global Healthcare Conference (Transcript)
Jun 11 RMD Zacks.com featured highlights include ResMed, Booz Allen Hamilton, CrediCorp and American Express
Jun 10 RMD Capricor Advances in DMD Therapy With Positive Study Data
Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is the most common type of sleep apnea and is caused by complete or partial obstructions of the upper airway. It is characterized by repetitive episodes of shallow or paused breathing during sleep, despite the effort to breathe, and is usually associated with a reduction in blood oxygen saturation. These episodes of decreased breathing, called "apneas" (literally, "without breath"), typically last 20 to 40 seconds.Individuals with OSA are rarely aware of difficulty breathing, even upon awakening. It is often recognized as a problem by others who observe the individual during episodes or is suspected because of its effects on the body. OSA is commonly accompanied with snoring. Some use the terms obstructive sleep apnea syndrome or obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome to refer to OSA which is associated with symptoms during the daytime. Symptoms may be present for years or even decades without identification, during which time the individual may become conditioned to the daytime sleepiness and fatigue associated with significant levels of sleep disturbance. Individuals who generally sleep alone are often unaware of the condition, without a regular bed-partner to notice and make them aware of their symptoms.
As the muscle tone of the body ordinarily relaxes during sleep, and the airway at the throat is composed of walls of soft tissue, which can collapse, it is not surprising that breathing can be obstructed during sleep. Although a minor degree of OSA is considered to be within the bounds of normal sleep, and many individuals experience episodes of OSA at some point in life, a small percentage of people have chronic, severe OSA.
Many people experience episodes of OSA for only a short period. This can be the result of an upper respiratory infection that causes nasal congestion, along with swelling of the throat, or tonsillitis that temporarily produces very enlarged tonsils. The Epstein-Barr virus, for example, is known to be able to dramatically increase the size of lymphoid tissue during acute infection, and OSA is fairly common in acute cases of severe infectious mononucleosis. Temporary spells of OSA syndrome may also occur in individuals who are under the influence of a drug (such as alcohol) that may relax their body tone excessively and interfere with normal arousal from sleep mechanisms.

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