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Snoring
What you can do
There is no shortage of ‘cures’,
for snoring (over 300 anti-snoring devices have been registered
at the USA patent office alone), but in many cases self-help
is effective.
- Lose weight if you are overweight.
- Avoid alcohol, tranquillizers and sleeping pills within
4 hours of bedtime.
- You could try a herbal remedy from a health shop or pharmacy
but, according to Health Which? (December 2001),
there is little evidence that they are effective despite
the claims on the packaging. There are gargles or throat
sprays that you use at bedtime, which contain peppermint,
thyme, pine and eucalyptus oils. They may help by leaving
a thin friction-reducing layer on the palate and uvula. They
are also the most pleasant of the anti-snoring remedies for
your sleeping partner.
- Put a walnut, cork or even a tennis ball into a sock and
pin it to the back of your pyjamas (use a safe nappy pin).
This will encourage you to sleep sideways rather than on
your back.
- Tilt the head of your bed up 10 cm (4 inches) by putting
bricks under the legs to lessen the effect of gravity on
the throat muscles. Do not use a thick, hard pillow; this
will kink your neck and make the problem worse.
- Try sleeping in a whiplash foam collar, to stop the neck
kinking.
- Have a coffee or cola drink at night, so that your partner
gets to sleep first.
- Nostril dilators encourage nasal breathing and help to
prevent mouth breathing. To decide if nasal dilators might
help, stand in front of a mirror and close one nostril with
your hand. Breathe in through the other and see if the nostril
tends to get sucked in. If it does, support it with the clean
end of a match and see if breathing is easier. Check the
other nostril in the same way. If this does improve your
breathing, then nasal dilators might be helpful (only 10%
of snorers are in this category). There are various types
of nasal dilator (see useful
contacts). Some are
inserted into the nostrils and some are self-adhesive strips
that you apply to the outside of the nose to widen the nostrils.
You can buy them from pharmacies.
- You may be snoring mainly because you
sleep with your mouth open. To test this, open your mouth
and make a snoring noise. Now try again with your mouth
closed. If you snore only with your mouth open, a device
to keep your mouth closed may help (see useful
contacts).
A reader of Dr Le Fanu’s Daily
Telegraph column suggest a do-it-yourself version – take
a lady’s stocking and bind it tightly under the jaw
and over the head with a reef knot.
Plastic mouth devices (technically called mandibular advancement
splints, because the mandible is the bone of the lower jaw) are
available to hold the jaw slightly forward while you sleep; when
the jaw is in this forward position the airway opens wider. There
are various different types (see useful
contacts),
and some can be moulded to fit by placing them in hot water.
These devices may be difficult to get used to, but are said to
help 70% of snorers. They are, however, inferior to the type
properly fitted by dentists.
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