Surgeon First in Area with Breakthrough Sleep Apnea Treatment
December 22, 2022
The Inspire option offers sleep apnea patients a convenient treatment without CPAP machines.
Patients who have suffered with sleep apnea and have difficulty using or maintaining CPAP machines now have a new option. Inspire is a breakthrough sleep apnea treatment that works inside the body while the patient sleeps by monitoring the patient’s breathing and delivering mild stimulation to open the airway.
The stimulation allows the patient to breathe normally and sleep peacefully. Using a remote, the patient simply turns on Inspire before falling asleep and off upon waking. There is no mask or hose – just a simple remote.
Dr. Jarrod Keeler, chief of surgery at the Allentown Campus of the St. Luke’s University Health Network, is first in the area who performs this FDA-approved procedure, which works inside the body to treat the cause of sleep apnea with the click of a button. The procedure to place a small device inside the body is typically completed in same-day surgery and involves a few days of at-home recovery. Pain or discomfort is minimal, and patients overwhelmingly report dramatically positive results within a relatively brief period following the surgery.
“Patients frequently tell me that they appreciate finally not having to deal with any struggles with the CPAP machine while reaping all the benefits,” he said.
One of those patients is Laura Baylo, a 58-year-old dental assistant in Bethlehem who suffered with sleep apnea and its effects since she was in her thirties. “I had it for years without even realizing it,” she said. “I was waking up constantly, feeling out of breath, almost like I was suffocating.”
A sleep study confirmed a diagnosis of severe sleep apnea, and Baylo started treating it with a CPAP machine. “I’d say, in the beginning, it worked for me for a hot minute,” she said. “But I found the machine very difficult. It never fit right; it would actually wake me up with distracting sounds…. let’s just say that it could never be my best friend.”
When her cardiologist told her about the Inspire sleep apnea option, she said she readily embraced the idea. “After researching it, I was totally on board,” she said. “I’m not afraid of surgery, not afraid of going under. I just went for it and I’m so glad I did.”
Her brief surgery went well, and she experienced little discomfort after it. She was back to work in a few days and has been enjoying the benefits of deep, healthy sleep for more than a year now. “I never realized how much sleep apnea affected my health until I started feeling so much better,” she said. “For me, it was so worth having this procedure, and that’s what I would tell anyone who is considering it. It’s a no-brainer.”
Having an impact on public health
Keeler, who was just named a Surgeon of Excellence by Inspire (the first in the Lehigh Valley and the only surgeon in the region), came by an interest in this type of surgery while studying Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery fellowship at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
“Stanford is sort of a mecca in the world of sleep surgery,” he said, “and my exposure to that really helped me appreciate the deep impact sleep plays in public health and safety in this country. People who suffer with sleep apnea and sleep deprivation are at much greater risk for heart attacks, strokes, high blood pressure, diabetes, car accidents….the list goes on. It’s an area where we can really have a deep impact on not just quantity of life, but quality of life.”
When Keeler came to St. Luke’s, he reached out to Inspire, the company that developed a surgical approach to treating sleep apnea, thereby eliminating the CPAP machine that many patients find uncomfortable, difficult to keep clean and cumbersome to travel with. And some, Keeler said, confess to having concerns about developing romantic relationships while having to use one. “As one patient told me, they didn’t want to have bring that machine along on dates,” he said.
After learning more about the procedure and the level of interest among residents of the Lehigh Valley, Keeler began working with Inspire and the St. Luke’s network to offer the technology locally. The first Inspire implant surgery was successfully completed at St. Luke’s in September of 2020, and Keeler has performed nearly 100 since then. His oldest patient was 88, and his youngest was only 29. “He is the picture of health but has sleep apnea and was struggling, just like so many others who are unable to tolerate CPAP,” Keeler said of his young patient.”
Not everyone with sleep apnea is a good candidate. A diagnosis of moderate to severe sleep apnea is required, and the patient cannot be significantly overweight. A sleeping airway examination must also identify the cause of obstruction. There are a series of follow up visits, but Dr. Keeler said “our team at St. Luke’s have created an entire care pathway to ensure patients are successful throughout their lives.”
Some patients also express a concern about the implant’s compatibility with MRIs, but Keeler said that a recent FDA approval ensures that all the devices are fully compatible with magnetic resonance imaging. Nearly all insurances in the Lehigh Valley now cover Inspire therapy, and Keeler notes that the device has a typical battery life of more than a decade.
Keeler is working with fellow physicians to refine the procedure and has already decreased the size of the two incisions. The physicians, he said, are part of a broader team at St. Luke’s to address sleep issues.
“Our entire team is at the forefront of this science. My partners on the St. Luke’s Sleep Medicine Team -- Drs. Giuseppe Guglielmello. David Cohen and Joseph Ramzy -- are helping us drive forward patient care and medicine showing significant improvements in patient’s lives in ways we didn’t know were possible through this and other treatments for sleep apnea,” Dr. Keeler said. “We are committed to ensuring that our community isn’t just ‘following the trends’ set by other colleagues, but that our patients will be some of the first to set the future of medicine.”
Virtually all of his patients who opted for the Inspire implant, he said, are glad they took this step. “Afterward, they say they don’t know why they waited,” Keeler said. “And with patients who are on the fence, I ask them: Why would you not do something that could help you when sleep is such an important part of your life?”
To learn more about the Inspire therapy, if you qualify, and what the next steps would be for you or your loved one, call Dr. Keeler’s office at (610) 628-1225.
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