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Your Good Health: Wife's erratic breathing raises concerns

Dear Dr. Roach: My wife of 52 years is 71 and has developed what I assume is a problem with her breathing when she sleeps. During some periods of sleep, she starts taking a rhythmic set of breaths.
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Dr. Keith Roach writes a medical question-and-answer column weekdays.

Dear Dr. Roach: My wife of 52 years is 71 and has developed what I assume is a problem with her breathing when she sleeps.

During some periods of sleep, she starts taking a rhythmic set of breaths. There usually are four deep breaths followed by four shallow breaths.

Each set of the four breaths decreases in intensity, and the shallow breaths are barely recognizable. She also has developed tics in her arms and legs.

Needless to say, this frightens me.

She has peripheral neuropathy and takes Lyrica and two different doses of Cymbalta daily.

Can you provide any suggestions concerning these maladies and/or recommendations for treatment?

C.G.

I congratulate you on your marriage, but also commend your attention to detail.

You seem to be doing an excellent job of describing a type of breathing called Cheyne-Stokes, which can be found in many conditions, including several neurological conditions (I don鈥檛 have enough information to make a diagnosis, but her neurologist probably does); heart failure; and in some normal people.

However, it is most concerning as a sign of sleep apnea, often in combination with one of these conditions.

If I were seeing her, I would strongly consider a sleep study.

Since essentially every sleep study I have ever done is positive, I have come to the conclusion that I am not ordering enough sleep studies: I must have had patients with sleep-disordered breathing that I didn鈥檛 suspect.

If she does have a sleep-disordered breathing diagnosis, treatment may improve her quality of life.

Dear Dr. Roach: I鈥檓 in the process of working out a salivary stone. From what I can tell, it鈥檚 in my left submandibular gland.

The ENT doctor said it is making progress, so he doesn鈥檛 want to remove it. He recommends that I keep myself hydrated.

I鈥檓 just not totally sure where it鈥檚 supposed to end up coming out of, and thus where I should be encouraging it to go.

It seems to have stopped making progress.

D.E.

There are three main salivary glands: the parotid (in the cheek), the sublingual gland (under the tongue) and the submandibular glands (on either side below the tongue).

Dehydration and some medicines predispose a person to developing these.

A traditional treatment is the lemon cure: Sucking on a lemon is a strong stimulus for saliva, which can help propel the stone out. (It comes out through the salivary duct in the floor of the mouth, near the base of the tongue.)

Unfortunately, it doesn鈥檛 always work, and sometimes an ear, nose and throat doctor has to either dilate the duct or grab the stone and pull it out.

Stones less than two mm usually pass by themselves.

If the stone doesn鈥檛 pass, there are alternatives to surgery, such as extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy, commonly used for kidney stones.

This procedure uses sound waves to blast the stone into small pieces, which usually can then pass easily.

Since it hasn鈥檛 gotten better, I think it鈥檚 probably time to go back to the ENT doctor.

Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to [email protected].