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How To Stop Your Snoring - 3

Snoring is not a condition exclusive to either gender or any age group. Studies indicate that snoring could afflict almost everyone – even small, little babies! Surprised? The following article gives you a description on the physiology of snoring and also advises on the necessity for you to identify major health and lifestyle factors that could lead to an individual having a snoring disorder. Such factors could include physiological causes like allergies, obesity and even a potbelly or habits like smoking or alcohol consumption. It is important to determine such causes before you can start looking for cures to stop snoring. Otherwise, you may end up spending a lot of money on ‘cures’ that are not suitable.

You’ll also be enlightened on why snoring afflicts more men than women and why some people snore louder than others (though the search for stop snoring cures could also be from more women who do not snore but are suffering partners of snorers). Read on to find out about why snoring usually happens at night and how one can easily get information on various stop snoring cures by doing a search on the internet.

So…Just What the Heck is Snoring, Anyway?

Technically, snoring is defined as any resonant noise from the respiratory tract that emerges during sleep.

Biologically, snoring refers to a vibration in the airway connecting the nose and the mouth; a vibration that can emerge through the mouth, the nose, or (as some non-snorers are painfully aware), it can emerge through both!

As you can sense, the more narrow the airway, generally speaking, the more intense the vibration; and ultimately, the louder the snore.

You may also be wondering why snoring only seems to emerge at night; after all, people literally use their airway every moment of their life; so why is snoring a nocturnal dilemma?

The answer to this is found in looking at the tissues within the airway. This tissue is very soft, and at night becomes relaxed; its similar to how some muscles, like biceps, become relaxed at night since the body does not require them.

As the throat (and its subsequent tissue) relaxes during sleep, the wind tunnel/airway becomes narrower and hence, snoring occurs.

Why Do Some People Snore Louder than Others?

This, too, is the reason why some people snore louder than others; and why the actual tone and pitch of one snorer may be rather different than another.

The actual snoring sound that emerges is dependant upon the force of wind that is being pushed through the (narrowed) airway. As you can envision, the more potent the force of wind (i.e. the faster the speed of the wind), the louder the snoring.

This is also why even babies can snore; but its often not considered snoring in the conventional sense, because an infants force of wind through their wind tunnel is so mild, that it can easily be ignored (though this can lead to complications; infant snoring can often be a symptom for a breathing and/or respiration problem, including allergy).

However, while snoring affects people of both genders and of all ages, it typically does afflict more men than women. There are a few reasons for this.

Snoring Tends to Favor Men

Overall, mens necks tend to be larger than womens necks; and thus there may be more fleshy tissue in there just waiting to combine with air flow and cause snoring.

Another reason is that women produce the hormone called Progesterone, which is considered by some medical experts to be an aid in reducing or preventing snoring. In fact, there are some anti-snoring treatments that involve Progesterone therapy for snoring men. Factors that Increase and/or Lead to Snoring

There are several health and lifestyle factors that contribute to snoring; and this is true for both men and women, since snoring is a condition that does affect both genders (though surveys suggest that men snorers outnumber women snorers by a ratio of 2:1).

Some of the major health and lifestyle factors that can contribute to snoring include:

< Allergies, which can clog the airway and trachea

< Allergy medications, which can dry the nasal cavities

< Cold and Flu, which can similarly clog the airway (this is why some people experience snoring only when theyre suffering a cold or flu)

< Thickened tissues in the nasal passages, which can sometimes result from some surgeries unrelated to snoring

< Overuse of nasal sprays which irritate the nasal passageway

< Enlarged adenoids and/or tonsils

< Goiter (swelling of the an ineffective thyroid gland in the neck)

< A disproportionately large tongue that blocks airflow

< Ineffective regulation and neural control of mucus membranes

< Obesity and excess weight (leading to an enlarged neck and excess soft tissue in the trachea)*

< Excess gut/belly (relatively decreasing the size of the lungs)*

< Drinking alcohol**, which:

o sedates the throat muscles and causes them to collapse o dilates blood vessels which swells up throat tissue

< Cigarette smoking, which inflames the upper airway

< The normal aging process, which can simply lead to a loss of muscle tone in the neck and thus snoring

* Since relatively more men tend to experience an excess gut, this is one reason why more men tend to experience snoring than women.

** Any medication (prescribed, over the counter, or illicit) that leads to excessive relaxation can lead to snoring.

So while we've looked at what snoring is, and what (rather common) factors and variables lead to/increase snoring, there still remains a very important element to focus upon: just how devastating is snoring? I answer this rather ominous question in my next article.

V.Anantha Krishnan is a webmaster of Top Ranked eBooks. You will find great ebooks on various topics here. News about sleep Apnea & Snoring is published Everyday with fresh content on his website at http://www.ebook-retailers.com/wp1/index.php.

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