Thursday, August 4, 2011
The Snore Patrol Lies Outside Your Door
The following was an article written by Matthew Edlund, M.D in the Huffington Post:
Snoring is not normal. Markedly interrupting sleep, it's associated with increased heart attack and stroke risk. Prolonged snoring eventually leads to sleep apnea -- "stopped breathing" episodes that can put the individual's life at risk.
And snoring is often loud. It wakes up other people, particularly spouses. This can put a marriage's survival at risk.
It also wakes up hotel guests -- a lot.
Not Yet Coming to a Hotel Near You
Crowne Plaza has recently received much press for starting its own "snore patrols" and snoring absorption rooms, fitted with special soundproofing and white noise generators, as reported in Reuters. However, the U.S. has been left out thus far. The snore patrols have started in a few British cities, and the snoring absorption rooms have been set up in Europe and the Middle East.
Why Are They Doing It?
Though it sometimes seems as though the rest of the society does not yet get it, rest is critical to human regeneration -- and overall function and productivity. Hotel guests kept up by snoring become unhappy, as they regard a good night's sleep and a restful atmosphere as requirements of any hostelry. They may not want to come back. And Crowne Plaza has also set up "quiet zones", floors for people less prone to carousing who desire calming rest. The "snore patrols" will be particularly careful to keep these quiet zones quiet.
What Happens When the Snore Patrol Rouses a Loud Snorer?
They will presumably be asked to move to "non-quiet" zones -- though doing so in a full hotel at 3 a.m. may prove a stretch. In Europe, they may be moved to "snore absorption" rooms, although room availability will remain an issue.
What Is the Two Motel Rule?
The "Two Motel Rule," a.k.a. the Two Hotel Rule, declares that when someone is sleeping loud enough to be heard not only in their motel but in the motel next door, highly problematic snoring is present. People who snore this loudly should quickly consider seeing a sleep specialist to investigate possible sleep apnea.
Why Is Snoring Such a Problem?
1. It's common. There are estimates that about 25 to 40 percent of adults snore fairly loudly.
2. It's bad for your health. Snoring is complicated. There are a lot of muscles up in the back of the mouth, which has made treating snoring with electrical devices -- with the exception of CPAP, a direct air splint -- very difficult to manage. Most people don't enjoy having electrodes stuck up the back of their throats while they're trying to sleep, though the technology is improving.
What Makes Snoring Harmful?
Snoring appears to desynchronize breathing and circulation. When the two are out of whack, as occurs in sleep apnea, all kinds of bad stuff may happen, including potentially dangerous arrhythmias, lower cardiac output, autonomic dysfunction and a lot more awakenings from sleep which is bad for memory and learning. CPAP machines are effective for both snoring and sleep apnea, in part because they work to create a rhythm that allows circulation and breathing get back in sync.
What Else Increases Snoring?
Two big factors are alcohol and weight gain. Extra weight makes one more prone to snore. And alcohol, by lowering muscle tone and generally disrupting brain function, can produce far more snoring as well as severe apneas in people otherwise lacking evidence of illness.
One clinical history immediately comes to mind. When I was teaching at Brown, I saw a 30-year-old woman in the ICU with sudden respiratory failure. She drank a lot of vodka on her 30th birthday, developing severe apneas that left her unable to breathe. After the alcohol left her system the apneas stopped. (Note: People don't realize that there is a circadian rhythm to all drugs, and alcohol has 2-3 times the psychomotor effects at midnight than it does at 6 p.m. Have that glass at dinner, okay?)
As for weight, I usually try to control snoring in people through getting them to more effectively regenerate their bodies through engaging food, activity, rest and socialization in a pattern that fits their body clocks and makes it easier for them to get slimmer. One simple rule of thumb is to move after meals. Sleeping position also helps -- many folks snore less sleeping on their sides.
The Bottom Line:
Snoring is both a public and private health problem, which is why we are seeing the emergence of new hotel snoring policies. Besides waking others, snoring may injure you through sleep apnea and cardiovascular disease -- or poison your relationship with people you love. Desynchronizing breathing and circulation is not good for you.
So try to regenerate your body is such a way as to reduce or prevent snoring -- and deflect the unwelcome attentions of the corridor pacing snoring patrol.
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