Is your or your partner’s snoring the primer for family jokes? Does your loud snoring come with an “earplugs required” caveat for your partner? Is your snoring the rule, not the exception?
Chronic, loud snoring may be a bigger personal problem than just a nuisance for other people who have to listen to your nightly nasally noises. In other words, while their sleep might be disrupted, your snoring might be caused by a medical condition called sleep apnea, which can have significant health consequences. Or, maybe you are just a loud, chronic snorer.
Knowing the difference and telltale signs between loud snoring and sleep apnea is important, as identifying the potential problem underlying your chronic snoring is the first step to getting healthy again.
Obstructive sleep apnea is a sleeping disorder and medical condition where you repeatedly stop breathing many times throughout the night due to some kind of physical ‘obstruction’ in your airway. Namely, this obstruction is often your throat closing, though your tongue or tonsils may also contribute to the airway being blocked.
OSA happens when the throat muscles in the back relax, causing the airway to narrow and your tongue to cleave to the back of your mouth, instigating snoring and a closed airway. When this happens you stop breathing and eventually rouse to begin breathing again, but you likely won’t remember ever waking up during the middle of the night.
Eventually your airway becomes blocked, and you stop breathing
This process can happen many times per hour:
The consequences are still the same with mild, moderate, and severe OSA, namely: lower quality of life, lower life expectancy, heart disease, and so on. The only difference may be the prevalence of the symptoms. It is much more common in men than women.
Snoring can be caused by:
The point is this: snoring doesn’t always mean you have OSA. Fixing your snoring can be as simple as learning to sleep on your back, or it could mean getting a sleep study, diagnoses, and wearing a CPAP device.
Deciding whether or not your chronic snoring is caused by sleep apnea is matter of identifying other symptoms of OSA in conjunction with your chronic snoring.
Besides snoring, other telltale signs of obstructive sleep apnea are:
Risk factors for sleep apnea include:
Bed partners can be instrumental in helping you identify that your snoring may be caused by OSA. As many bed partners can attest to, they could sit and count the seconds while their untreated OSA partner doesn’t breathe throughout the night.
This can be a bit trickier without a bed partner, because you will have to identify other OSA symptoms that you may or may not be struggling with. If you live in Alaska and are concerned that you have OSA, getting a diagnosis is straightforward:
CPAP devices as a treatment for OSA stop the snoring, which means a better night for you and anyone sleeping in your vicinity.