SNORING AND SLEEP APNEA

Is your partner's snore disturbing you? Hang on! It is not something to fight over but an issue which needs immediate medical attention.

Snoring is due to a blockage in the breathing passage. This might be due to allergies, throat weakness, mis-positioned jaw or tongue and fatty deposits in and around the throat. There might also be a major problem hiding behind the snoring, which is called obstructive sleep apnea.

Snoring is the noise that is produced due to the movement of air between the narrow air passage formed by soft tissues at the back of your nose and throat.  Snoring in obstructive sleep apnea is a serious problem which interferes with normal breathing while sleeping.  A person who is affected by sleep apnea snores when he sleeps on his back and does not when he sleeps on his sides.

Chemistry behind sleep apnea and snoring:
Due to obstruction in the nasal passage, the soft tissues of the throat, soft palate, and the tongue collapses the upper airway which makes breathing difficult for a brief period of time.

To worsen the problem, the airway is being tightly sealed due to the negative pressure of inhaling which makes it harder on the soft tissues.  In due course, the person has to wake up to create tension on the muscles, tongue and throat to draw more air to replenish the lungs by opening up the airway.  This in turn causes snorting, startling, and waking patterns.

A person affected by apnea, first snores, then stops breathing for a brief period of 10-20 seconds, which quietens the snoring, suddenly gasps for breath and wakes up with snort to inhale more air. This pattern is called sleep-snore-apnea-wake pattern. It is a very disruptive for a normal sleep pattern. This occurs to mostly 93.3% of people with sleep apnea. This pattern will occur for around 100-400 times per night in extreme cases.

Medical Treatment:
1. Using of 'Breathe Right strips' might relieve the blocked nasal passage during sleep.
2. Wearing a mask at night helps the throat open and improve breathing.
3. Using of decongestants and antihistamine on the nasal passage will prevent it from clogging.
4. Use of special pillows to stretch the neck has been found effective. This method reduces snoring and improves sleep.
5. Sleeping in the upright position helps in improving the oxygen levels in overweight people with sleep apnea.  Therefore elevating the head of the bed helps in such scenarios.
6. CPAP: In this method the patient's nose is covered by a mask. Through that mask the air is supplied into the throat at a predetermined pressure level. The optimal level of air pressure which is sent in, keeps the airways from closing up or obstructing throughout the night. It provides total control over snoring.
7. Turbinectomy: In this form of surgery the nasal passages are opened by removing bone and soft tissues.
8. Dental appliances are specially constructed appliances that will hold the tongue or the jaw forward to open the airway at the back of the throat.
9. Laser surgery can be performed to remove excess tissue from the uvula and soft palate.
10. Injection Snoreplasty, a topical anesthetic is injected to numb the back of the throat and palate. This causes the mouth to stiffen during the next three weeks, thereby stopping the fluttering of palate which causes the noise in snoring.

Sleep apnea news on the Web

Robotic Surgery Helps Sleep Apnea Patients
Doctors at OU Medical Center are now using the da vinci robotic surgery system to help sleep apnea patients.Watch Video

Sleep center relocates
RANSON - The sleep lab at Jefferson Memorial Hospital has moved to a new location across the street and is scheduled to reopen with new equipment and comfortable accommodations Aug. .

Graymark Healthcare adds two new sleep centers in Texas, Nebraska
Graymark Healthcare announced that it has added two new sleep centers in Texas and Nebraska with the signing of agreements to provide on-site services to Goodall-Witcher Medical Center in Central Texas and Henderson Community Hospital in Nebraska. These agreements continue to execute on Graymark's strategy to expand the availability of sleep medicine in rural communities that otherwise might not ...

Lake City hospital installs lab to test for sleep disorders
LAKE CITY Lake City Community Hospital recently installed the Carolina Sleep Lab, a two-bed sleep lab used to perform tests for sleep disorders.

Improve Patients' Quality of Life With aveoTSD(R) Anti-Snoring Device From Glidewell Dental Lab
Glidewell Dental Lab, provider of dental appliances for the treatment of snoring and sleep apnea, has successfully launched its newest product to dentists and patients: the aveoTSD.

More foods hinder than help sleep
A number of my apparently sleep-deprived friends and colleagues, upon learning I planned to write about foods that might help people sleep better, have told me they're eager to see what I come up with. Health - Sleep Disorders - Conditions and Diseases - United States - Organizations

When sheep can’t help you sleep
It may not seem surprising, in a society where energy drinks, mocha-frappuccinos and 12-hour workdays are so highly valued, that North Americans aren’t getting much sleep.

Cleveland Medical Devices gets $60K from Cuyahoga County loan fund
Cleveland Medical Devices Inc. has been awarded $60,000 from the Cuyahoga County New Product Development and Entrepreneurship Loan Fund to step up commercialization of its SleepView device for sleep apnea screening at home. CleveMed has a lineup of wireless diagnostic sleep systems, including SleepView, which is the smallest and lightest home sleep monitor with an American [...]

Graymark Healthcare Continues to Advance Strategy to Become Nation's Top Sleep Medicine Provider
Graymark Healthcare announced that it has added two new sleep centers in Texas and Nebraska with the signing of agreements to provide on-site services to Goodall-Witcher Medical Center in Central Texas and Henderson Community Hospital in Nebraska.

More spouses sleeping in separate beds
Relationship experts are troubled by a new marriage trend: More couples are starting to sleep in separate beds, even separate bedrooms.