Snoring is a sound made when you breathe through your mouth and nose when you are asleep. It happens when air doesn't move smoothly through your air passages making tissue in your mouth, nose and throat vibrate as the air passes through. The flow of air can be blocked because of excess tissue in the nose, mouth and throat, the position you sleep in or because of a health condition.

Most commonly, however, the soft tissue in your upper palate or throat starts vibrating as you sleep -- even if you are breathing easily through your nose, even if your uvula and tonsils are normal size. These noisy vibrations may occur for several reasons, the most simple being that your throat muscles relax during sleep. When you are a child, you typically have good muscle tone and do not snore, but as you get older, you put on weight and your throat tissues get flabbier. Alcohol and overeating before bedtime make the problem worse.

Symtoms Of Snoring

Obstructive sleep apnea is an extreme form of snoring in which your upper airway closes while you are asleep, causing an obstruction that prevents you from breathing for a brief period.

The negative pressure of inhaling pulls harder on your soft tissues, sealing the airway even more tightly.

Snoring is a noise that you may make while breathing during sleep. Snoring can be soft, loud, raspy, harsh, hoarse, or fluttering. Your bed partner may notice that you sleep with your mouth open and that you are restless while sleeping. If snoring interferes with your or your bed partner's sleep, either or both of you may feel tired during the day.

snoring causes

Following are the major snoring causes:

1. Muscle tone of the tongue

2. Blockage of airway

3. Increasing age

4. Alcoholic beverages and smoking

5. Overweight

Snoring Treatment Tips

SNORING TREATMENT TIP 1. Take a look at your diet. Although this probably won’t be the complete snoring treatment answer, it is worth starting with what you’re eating and drinking. You could well have intolerance to certain foods which affects your breathing, especially when lying on you back. For example, too much (or an intolerance to) dairy produce is likely to cause you to become blocked up with mucus, when horizontal, this collects causing heavy breathing and snoring. Alcohol is another common offender.

SNORING TREATMENT TIP 2. Being overweight is another significant contributor. Excess weight in the neck and chest puts pressure on the breathing passage.

Certain measures which are suggested to snorers are

- To exercise regularly and lose weight.

- To sleep on your side rather than your back.

- Avoid taking alcoholic drinks before going to bed.

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