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ResScan Essentials Clinical Guide

Cheyne-Stokes respiration

Cheyne-Stokes respiration is an unusual pattern of breathing that mostly occurs during sleep but can sometimes happen while awake. It involves a cycle of fast, shallow breaths, followed by slower, deeper breaths, and then a pause where no breathing occurs (called an apnoea). Instead of a full pause, some people might have very shallow breathing, called hypopnoea. This pattern usually repeats every 45 to 90 seconds.

Cheyne-Stokes breathing is linked to a condition called central sleep apnoea. Unlike obstructive sleep apnoea, which happens when something blocks the throat during sleep, central sleep apnoea occurs when the brain doesn’t send the right signals to the body to breathe. Cheyne-Stokes breathing happens because of a different kind of problem with how the body controls breathing. Even though they are similar, central sleep apnoea and Cheyne-Stokes breathing affect the body in different ways.