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Treatments
for Severe Snoring
Excerpt
By
Peter Fotinakes, ABCNews.com
Very loud snoring can often
be heard from another room, and possibly even from another apartment.
Relatively frequently, there are patients whose motivation to
see their physician comes from neighbors complaining of their
snoring. It is understandable, since people's snores have been
measured to be as loud as 90 decibels roughly the equivalent
of a jet at takeoff.
There are also studies suggesting that snorers have a higher
incidence of hearing loss possibly due to listening to
their own snoring. I would estimate that eight out of 10 couples
consulting our center for snoring sleep apart because of the disturbance
to the non-snoring partner, and snoring is often sited as a reason
in many divorces.
Snoring can be frustrating to a sleep partner, sometimes even
evoking anger and violence. Snorers often tell me that they're
coming in to get their sore ribs fixed because their sleep partner
keeps poking them with an elbow in an attempt to quell the noise.
Some snorers end up with pillows thrust over the faces or rolled
off of the bed onto the floor before getting their walking papers
to the living room couch.
Snoring Treatments
There are 101 home remedies for snoring, ranging from wrapping
a scarf around the nose and mouth to using certain drinks or sprays.
Most don't work. The first line of treatment may be as simple
as avoiding sleeping in the supine position, losing weight, or
avoiding sedatives and alcohol prior to bedtime. Using decongestants,
nasal steroid sprays, and other allergy treatments to relieve
nasal congestion also may help.
Accepted medical treatments for snoring are limited to oral
appliances and upper airway surgery. There are many different
oral appliances on the market, ranging from do-it-yourself models
that can be self-molded in boiling water and costing $20 to more
sophisticated models that dentists make.
Studies suggest that they "decrease" snoring in most cases,
but in life it is difficult to know in which patients they will
prove effective.
Oral appliances are small, unobtrusive devices whose side effects
are limited to jaw joint pain from moving the lower jaw forward
or tooth movement from anchoring the device.
CPAP, or continuous positive airway pressure, is a breathing
device that is more frequently used to treat sleep apnea. Although
it also relieves snoring, its cumbersome use prevents it from
being commonly prescribed for treatment of snoring alone.
Surgical Remedies for Severe Snoring
Upper airway surgeries include laser-assisted uvulopalatopharygeoplast
(LAUP), in which the surgeon uses a laser to cut away part of
the soft palate, including the uvula. The soft palate is the major
component in creating the snoring sound because it flutters as
air passes through a narrowed pharyngeal airway (the throat).
The surgeon may also remove other tissue (such as tonsils) or
open the nasal passageways if those structures also contribute
to the snoring. LAUPs are said to be 90 percent effective in "decreasing"
snoring, but their success rate in treating sleep apnea may be
as little as 60 percent, so patients should be evaluated for apnea
if they consider this procedure.
Somnoplasty is a newer procedure that uses a radiofrequency
probe, a needle with a microwave tip that heats a small amount
of surrounded tissue and essentially melts it. The needle can
be placed in the soft palate, the tongue, and the nasal turbinates
(inner foldings of the nose) to shrink them. Somnoplasty has the
advantage of a significant reduction of pain compared to the laser
procedures. It's a newer procedure so we are still waiting to
see how it works in the long run. It is said to be as effective
as LAUP.
A Word About Snoring Treatments
Studies of snoring treatments often use subjective factors when
touting a "decrease" in the sound. So a procedure may be said
to be 90 percent effective but the snoring was "reduced,"
i.e., it's not as loud. Subjective assessments, especially when
relying on a sleep partner, may be nothing more than a matter
of opinion. Essentially, the surgeries are most reliable in reducing
snoring, but are not a cure-all.
People should also know that there is often a recurrence of
snoring after surgeries that may occur from six months to six
years after the procedure.
A final word of caution. People should know that snoring is
a symptom of sleep apnea, which is disease that has long-term
health consequences such as hypertension, heart attack, strokes,
etc. Since most of the above treatments (except CPAP) are much
less effective in treating apnea than they are at treating snoring,
people often require evaluation in a sleep center with a sleep
test prior to their snoring treatment, and sometimes afterward.
Dr. Peter A. Fotinakes is medical director of the sleep
disorders center at the University of California, Irvine.
Reference
Source 104
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