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Snoring
Some 45 percent of normal adults snore at least occasionally, and 25 percent
are habitual snorers. Problem snoring is more frequent in males and
overweight persons, and usually grows worse with age.
More than 300 devices are registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as cures for
snoring. Some are variations on old idea of sewing a tennis ball on the pajama back - to
force the snorer to sleep on his side (Snoring is often worse when the person sleeps on
his back). Chin and head straps, neck collars, and devices inserted into the mouth are
usually disappointing as snoring cures. Many electrical devices have been designed to
produce painful or unpleasant stimuli when the patient snores. The presumption was that a
person could be trained or conditioned not to snore. Unfortunately, snoring is not under
the person's control whatsoever; and if these devices work it is probably because they
keep the snorer awake.
What Causes Snoring?
The noisy sounds of snoring occur when there is an obstruction to the free flow of air
through the passages at the back of the mouth and nose. This is the collapsible part of
the airway where the tongue and upper throat meet soft palate and uvula (the fleshy
structure that dangles from the mouth back into the throat. When these structures strike
against each other and vibrate during breathing, that is snoring. Persons who snore have
at least one of the following problems:
- Poor muscle tone (lack of tightness) in the muscles of the tongue and
throat. Flabby muscles allow the tongue to fall
backwards into the airway or allow the throat muscles to be drawn in from the sides
into the airway. This occurs when the persons muscular control is too relaxed from
alcohol or from drugs which cause sleepiness. It also happens in some people when they
relax in the deep-sleep stages.
- Excessive bulkiness of tissues of the throat. Large tonsils and
adenoids, for example, commonly cause snoring in children. Overweight persons also have
bulky neck tissues. Cysts or tumors could also be present, but they are rare.
- Excessive length of the soft palate and uvula. A long palate may
narrow the opening from the nose into the throat. As it dangles in the airway, it acts as
a flutter valve during relaxed breathing and contributes to the noise of snoring. A long
uvula makes matters even worse.
- Obstructed nasal airways. When a person has a stuffy or blocked-up
nose he must pull hard to inhale air through it. This creates an exaggerated vacuum in his
throat, in the collapsible part of the airway, and it pulls together the floppy tissues of
the throat. Snoring occurs even in persons who would not snore if they could breathe
through the nose properly. This explains why some people snore only during the hay fever
season, or when they have a cold or sinus infection. Also, deformities of the nose or nasal
septum frequently cause such obstruction. "Deviated septum" is a common term for
a deformity inside the nose in the wall that separates one nostril from the other.
Is Snoring Serious?
Socially - yes. Snoring is disruptive to family life. It makes the snorer an object of
ridicule and causes other household members sleepless nights and resentfulness. Snorers
become unwelcome roommates on vacations or business trip. Medically, it also disturbs the
sleeping patterns of the snorer himself, so that he may not sleep restfully. Furthermore,
heavy snorers tend to develop high blood pressure at a younger age than non-snorers. The
most exaggerated form of snoring is known as obstructive sleep apnea, when loud snoring is
interrupted by frequent episodes of totally obstructed breathing. This is serious if the
episodes last over 10 seconds each and occur more than 7 times per hour. Your physician
may recommend a laboratory sleep study as a way of evaluating your symptoms. Apnea
patients may experience 30 to 300 obstructed events per night, and many spend as much as
half their sleep time with blood oxygen levels below normal.
During their obstructive episodes, the heart must pump harder to circulate the blood
faster. This can cause irregular heartbeats, and after many years it leads to elevated
blood pressure and heart enlargement. The immediate effect of this oxygen starvation is
that the person must sleep in a lighter stage and tense his muscles enough to open his
airway to get air into his lungs. Since snorers with severe sleep apnea are often unaware
of it, laboratory sleep study may be the only way to discover it. People with obstructive
sleep apnea may spend little of their night-time hours in the deep-sleep stages that are
essential for a good rest, therefore, they awaken unrefreshed and are sleepy much of the
day. They may fall asleep while driving to work or while on the job.
Can Snoring be Cured?
By far the majority of snores can be helped. For adults who are mild or occasional
snorers, the following self-help remedies are worth trying.
- Adopt an athletic life-style and exercise daily to develop good
muscle tone and lose weight.
- Avoid tranquilizers, sleeping pills, and antihistamines before
bedtime.
- Avoid alcoholic beverages within 4 hours of retiring.
- Avoid heavy meals within 3 hours of retiring.
- Avoid getting overtired; establish regular sleeping patterns.
- Sleep sideways rather than on the back. Consider sewing a pocket on the
pajama back to hold a tennis ball. (this helps to avoid sleeping on your
back.)
- Tilt the entire bed with the head upwards 4" (place bricks under
the bedposts at the head of the bed).
- Allow the non-snorer to get to sleep first.
Heavy snorers, those who snore in any position they sleep in, and
so-called "obnoxious snorers" need more help than the suggestions above. When
snoring becomes disruptive to the life of the snorer or his family, medical advice should
be sought, especially if other household members suspect the obstructive sleep apnea
problem (very loud snoring periods when all airflow stops - even though the snorer is
trying to breathe).
The heavy snorer deserves a thorough examination of the nose, mouth, palate, throat, and
neck. Studies in a sleep laboratory are valuable to determine how serious the snoring is
and what effects it has on the snorer's health. Treatment will depend, of course, on the
diagnosis. It may be as simple as managing a nasal allergy or infection, surgically
correcting a nasal deformity, or removing tonsils and adenoids. Snoring/apnea may respond
best to surgery on the throat and palate to tighten up flabby tissues and expand the air
passages, an operation called UvuloPalatoPharyngoPlasty (UPPP). To the patient, it feels
like having a tonsillectomy. If surgery is too risky, unwanted or unsuccessful, the
patient may sleep every night wearing a nasal mask which delivers air pressure into the
throat ("CPAP"). Every chronically snoring child should also be thoroughly
examined. Medical evidence suggests a tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy will probably make
an important difference in the health and well-being of the child. Remember, snoring means
obstructed breathing, and obstruction can be serious. It's not funny, and it's not
definitely not hopeless.
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04/23/01
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Berkshire Ear, Nose, Throat, &
Audiological Associates, P.C. All rights reserved.
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Pittsfield, MA 01201
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