Michel Alkhalil

Dr. Michel Alkhalil’s Academic Training Across Pediatric And Adult Sleep Medicine

Michel Alkhalil MD

Michel Alkhalil, MD, is double board-certified in Sleep Medicine and Allergy & Immunology. He’s worked with both adults and kids, gaining a lot of experience. During his fellowship at places like Drexel University College of Medicine and St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children, Michel learned to spot sleep issues in people of all ages. Plus, he did another fellowship in Allergy & Immunology in the University of South Florida, which gave him more depth.

Because of this, Michel knows how allergies, asthma, and other immune problems can mess with your sleep and breathing. Now, as the Medical Director of the AAIRS Clinic and Troy Sleep Center, he puts this knowledge to use in an AASM-approved setup in Southeast Michigan. His special blend of skills lets him tackle really complicated cases where sleep, breathing, and allergies are all tangled up. With his high-level training and top certifications, patients know they’ll get super specialized care when they go to him.

“For sleep medicine to be effective, we need to see how sleep problems show up differently at various ages. Training with both kids and adults lets doctors assess sleep, breathing, and airway health based on what patients really need, so they get the right care.”

Readers interested in sleep medicine or pediatric sleep disorders, adult sleep apnea, and stuff like that, this article is for you. It’s also great for folks curious about AASM-accredited sleep centers and board-certified docs. People in Southeast Michigan, especially Oakland and Macomb counties, will find it useful too. So, whether you’re after info on allergy and immunology, respiratory health, or just general airway and sleep issues, this covers it. Plus, it’s perfect for those digging into fellowship training and integrated specialty care.

How Allergy And Immunology Add Clinical Context

“Michel Alkhalil also completed fellowship training in Allergy & Immunology at the University of South Florida in Tampa. That second fellowship is important because allergic disease, asthma, nasal obstruction, and immune-related airway inflammation can affect sleep quality and nighttime breathing. A patient with sleep disruption may also have allergy-related congestion. A patient with asthma may experience symptoms that are worse at night.”

Read the full article at: Media Coverage.

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