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	<title>Snoring Mouth Guard</title>
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	<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net</link>
	<description>A mouth guard may help to stop snoring.</description>
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		<title>Snoring Mouthpiece &#8211; Gagging and Salivation</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/snoring-mouthpiece-gagging-and-salivation/</link>
		<comments>http://snoringmouthguard.net/snoring-mouthpiece-gagging-and-salivation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jan 2011 16:49:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[anti snoring mouthguard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snoring mouth guard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snoring mouthpiece]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://snoringmouthguard.net/snoring-mouthpiece-gagging-and-salivation/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the most common problems that people face when using a snoring mouthpiece, is gagging. The mouthpiece can hit the back of your throat and make it uncomfortable.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We all know that a snoring mouthpiece (or mouthguard) can help you get a better night&#8217;s sleep as it deals with your snoring problems. When you are using these mouthpieces, you can often find that they lead to a number of issues. Some of them are easy to deal with, while others can become very complicated.</p>
<p>It is important that whenever you have any problem with your anti-snoring mouthpiece that you talk to your dentist, so that they can address the situation and offer you a solution that might be a bit more comfortable.</p>
<p>One of the most common problems that people face is gagging. This often occurs as the snoring mouthpiece hits the back of your throat and makes it uncomfortable for you to hold it in place in your mouth. Of course, the main reason that this happens is because you have a piece that is too large for your mouth, or one that isn&#8217;t setup properly to fit in your mouth.</p>
<p>If you experience this problem, you can check with your dentist to see if any adjustments need to be made. If they feel like it is a perfect fit, there is something you can do about it on your own.</p>
<p>To help train your mouth to settle down from gagging, you can practice wearing this piece of equipment on a more regular basis. Just until the problem stops. If you find you can&#8217;t keep it in for more than 20 minutes at a time, work with that and keep extending the amount of time you hold it in your mouth. This will eventually help you to become more accustomed to this process and will help to reduce the severity of this experience as well.</p>
<p>Of course, there could be another contributing factor as well. It is important that before you ever put this piece in your mouth at night, that you take a moment to clean it well. There should be no residue on it. Another important thing to do is blow your nose, a considerable amount of nighttime gagging occurs from postnasal drip.</p>
<p>While the chances of having this problem aren&#8217;t normally high, the way your mouth adjusts to handle the snoring mouthpiece increases the chances you will experience this problem. Generally, it is a good idea to deal with this problem and adjust your habits to ensure that they are better ones.</p>
<p>Along with the gagging, you might experience salivating as well. This is the process of saliva running down your face as you sleep. For most people, this problem isn&#8217;t too bad and it results in a small wet spot on the pillow when they wake up.</p>
<p>For others, this can become a complicated process that you will need to look over. In some cases, when you have the mouthpiece held firmly in your mouth, it can trigger the mouths response to salivate.</p>
<p>When you combine that with the fact that many of these snoring mouthpieces also prevent you from swallowing to a point, you can understand how messy this problem can be. If you find you are having an excessive problem, check with your dentist to see what they can offer you in terms of a snoring mouthpiece.</p>
<p>Another option you have it to reduce the consumption of food and drinks a few hours before you go to sleep. Then, brush your teeth at least an hour before you place your snoring mouthpiece in. This way, your body can begin to cease the amount of saliva that is producing when you go to bed. If you find that this doesn&#8217;t curb the problem entirely, you might also consider watching how often you chew on the mouthpiece.</p>
<p>Since you have something in your mouth, your body&#8217;s first instinct will be to chew on it. While that might be fine in some cases, you will find that it isn&#8217;t the ideal choice here. To help deal with this problem, wear your mouthpiece over the course of the entire day.</p>
<p>Try to focus on not chewing on it during this time and when you do, make a conscious effort to end that problem. Over the course of a week, you should be able to kick this habit and get back to being able to sleep at night without an abundance of saliva on your bed.</p>
<p>Smokers may find that reducing the number of cigarettes they smoke before bedtime might help to reduce the problems they are experiencing as well. For some individuals, when you simply cut out even 3 or 4 of these sticks in the evening, your sinuses can open back up and drain properly before you head to bed for the night.</p>
<p>On top of that, it is possible to reduce the saliva product effect the smoking can create as well. When you stick the cigarette and inhale, it does increase saliva production. Keep this in mind and consider reducing your overall consumption.</p>
<p>Your dentist might have other recommendations on this problem as well. There may be specific exercises you can do or foods you can remove from your diet to curb both your gagging and saliva production as well. Since there are a number of factors that go behind both of these problems, your dentist would be the perfect choice for seeing which of the suggestions made could be the best solution for you overall.</p>
<p>Most importantly, don&#8217;t just stop using your mouthpiece because it seems like the easy solution. There is a reason that you have been asked to place this unit in your mouth and you don&#8217;t want to give up on something that is helping you to take care of some temporary issues. Keep that in mind and do your best to solve the problems you face with some alternative methods first.</p>

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		<title>Will a Pillar Implant Stop Me snoring?</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/will-a-pillar-implant-stop-me-snoring/</link>
		<comments>http://snoringmouthguard.net/will-a-pillar-implant-stop-me-snoring/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jan 2011 02:41:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pillar implant]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://snoringmouthguard.net/will-a-pillar-implant-stop-me-snoring/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Pillar Procedure focuses on the soft palate. The doctor inserts three to five minute polyester implants into the soft palate to reduce vibration.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Before discussing the Pillar method of stopping snoring, you need to understand some of the other surgical methods first and the amount of success and problems from each. There is injection snoreplasty where doctors inject tetradecyl sulfate near the uvula, the piece of flesh that dangles in the back of your throat, while the patient has a local anesthetic.</p>
<p>This injection creates scar tissue in the soft palate of the mouth and reduces the vibration. While the procedure isn&#8217;t that invasive, it only affects the area near the uvula.</p>
<p>LAUP, laser assisted uvulopalatoplasty, is also performed under local anesthetic. In this procedure, the doctor uses a laser to remove tissue on the uvula to shorten it and shrink the tissue around the uvula. While there is severe pain and as long as a 10-day recovery, the procedure doesn&#8217;t seem to show long-term success and there are often other methods far superior that have a shorter recovery time and are less invasive.</p>
<p>Somnoplasty is another procedure used to shrink tissue but it&#8217;s tissue in the throat. The doctor delivers radiofrequency electrical charges to the area with a need while the patient is anesthetized. In order to have the best results, the patient has to undergo several procedures to achieve it.</p>
<p>The uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, shortened to UPPP, also removes excess tissue in the throat. Normally the procedure involves removing not only the tonsils but also any excess tissue that is in the back of the throat. While this obviously is one of the most invasive procedures, recovery time is also the longest and pain is the greatest. There are a great many complications in addition to the pain.</p>
<p>The Pillar Procedure is far less invasive than any of the others are. Doctors do use a local anesthetic but often there is limited recovery time and only mild discomfort. You have the procedure in the doctor&#8217;s office.</p>
<p>It focuses on stopping any excess vibration of the soft palate, which causes snoring. Since the doctor doesn&#8217;t cut away tissue, the patient normally resumes all their activities after the procedure.&nbsp; In most cases, the patient even resumes their normal pattern of eating right away also.</p>
<p><strong>How the Pillar Procedure Works.</strong></p>
<p>Snoring often comes from obstructions, collapse or vibrations of the upper tissues of the air passage. These include the nasal airway, tongue, tonsils, adenoids, pharyngeal walls and the soft palate. The Pillar Procedure focuses on the soft palate.</p>
<p>The doctor gives the patient a local anesthetic and then inserts three to five minute polyester implants into the soft palate. The material used isn&#8217;t new. In fact, it&#8217;s been around for well over 50 years and used in medical products that doctors implant in patients. The procedure isn&#8217;t experimental either. Over 30,000 people all over the world have used a Pillar Procedure to help stop their snoring or sleep apnea.</p>
<p>It takes a while, but little by little the implants the doctor inserted into the palate cause it to stiffen. By make the palate stiffer, it reduces the vibration of the soft palate, one of the main reasons for snoring. While a patient may find they have mild discomfort, this is often solved with a simple aspirin or ibuprofen. Most patients notice the implants but still aren&#8217;t in enough discomfort to cease normal diet or activities.</p>
<p>While the snoring doesn&#8217;t stop right away, it does improve, normally within six to nine weeks. Some patients may completely stop snoring at that time while others may take as long as three months to receive the maximum benefit. There are few complications with this procedure.</p>
<p>However, some complications do exist, but it happens in less than one percent of the implants. Some patients feel like there is something caught in the back of their throat, but normally that feeling goes away. Others report that discomfort, this occurs from extrusion. Extrusion occurs when a piece of the implant breaks through the skin. This normally occurs if the doctor implanted the material too deep or too shallow.</p>
<p>When this happens, the doctor simply removes the implant and then put in a new one.&nbsp; Other complications can occur but are rare. The patient may have a sore, scratchy throat, have some swelling of the mucous membranes, get an infection, have an allergic reaction to the material the doctor implanted, experience the implant moving to another location in the body or have a voice or taste change.</p>
<p>Not everyone is a candidate for this type of procedure. Before your doctor will consider the Pillar Procedure, he&#8217;ll need to consider all factors. Your height must be considered as well as your weight, the size of your tongue, tonsils, neck and uvula. Other procedures may work better for you if the problem lies elsewhere beyond the soft palate.</p>
<p>Those that have had the procedure report significant improvement in their snoring intensity and episodes of apnea when they had the Pillar Procedure. Bed partners noted they were pleased with the change in over 80 percent of the cases.&nbsp; Because it caused the snoring to cease, and reduced incidences of sleep apnea, most of the patients reported feeling less sleepy during the day.</p>
<p>Snoring can come from many different problems so you can&#8217;t just ask the doctor for the procedure. You must first qualify for the device. If your snoring comes from other sources, the Pillar Procedure isn&#8217;t for you. People with a short soft palate can&#8217;t use the procedure and those under 18 can&#8217;t either.</p>
<p>The Pillar Procedure won&#8217;t work completely for those that have a problem with their tongue falling to the back of their throat and blocking the airway. Some people find that using both the dental devices that jut the jaw forward or block the tongue from dropping in addition to the Pillar Procedure stops all episodes of apnea and reduces or eliminates all snoring.</p>
<p>While using both devices may seem cumbersome, it&#8217;s far better than using a CPAP machine for the rest of your life, and frequently, over the long haul, for less expensive.</p>

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		<title>I Often Wake with a Sore Throat. Could I be Snoring? I Live Alone.</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/wake-with-a-sore-throat/</link>
		<comments>http://snoringmouthguard.net/wake-with-a-sore-throat/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Dec 2010 04:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lifestyle changes to stop snoring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snoring sore throat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://snoringmouthguard.net/wake-with-a-sore-throat/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A sore throat in the morning is a good indication that something is going on in the middle of the night. It might be postnasal drip from a sinus infection or mouth breathing, both of which can cause snoring.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Living alone has many advantages but one of them isn&#8217;t learning about your sleeping patterns or whether you have a tendency to snore. However, there are often other indications even if you don&#8217;t have another human to listen to you at night. Of course, you could check to see if the cat develops a nervous condition from lack of sleep or ask a neighbor to listen to you sleep but you might only be an occasional snorer and your cat might like the sound.</p>
<p>A sore throat in the morning is a good indication that something is going on in the middle of the night. It might be postnasal drip from a sinus infection or mouth breathing, both of which can cause snoring.</p>
<p>Snoring occurs for many different reasons. One of them is mouth breathing as opposed to breathing through the nose. Inhaling through the mouth isn&#8217;t necessarily the cause of snoring if you don&#8217;t have enlarged structures in the back of your throat, improper placement of the jaw or flabby oral muscles, but if you do, then you might be snoring your night away while drying the throat and causing a sore tender throat in the morning.</p>
<p>Postnasal drip, sinus infection and a stuffy nose can all be contributors to snoring. If you have a stuffy nose, it can create suction when you inhale and pull the airways closed. If they&#8217;re partially blocked, you snore. If they&#8217;re completely blocked, you have sleep apnea, a condition where your air passage closes completely for a few seconds and your body no longer receives oxygen.</p>
<p>A sinus infection, stuffy nose and postnasal drip can also cause a sore throat, just like snoring can.</p>
<p>Of course, if you&#8217;re melodically spending your sleeping hours buzzing gleefully with no one to listen, it could make your throat dry and irritated too. This is another indication that you might be snoring your night away.</p>
<p>One way to find out what you do during the night is to tape record your sleep. Simply set a timer on the tape to begin recording. You might not catch the snoring the first time if the time you selected isn&#8217;t your snoring hour, simply set it for a different time to begin the next evening. You&#8217;ll most likely catch it within a few attempts if you snore.</p>
<p>You could visit a doctor whom specializes in sleep disorders and ask him to help investigate your sore throat. He might suggest that you use a humidifier in your room first if you live in an arid location or in the frozen north where the furnace always runs during the winter, causing dry air. He can also look at the structures of your throat and see if any look particularly enlarged or order a sleep study for you.</p>
<p>A sleep study involves someone watching you as you sleep, in addition to the doctors monitoring your brainwaves, heartbeat and breathing. They also record the movement of your legs, eyes and muscle tension. They use sensors placed on your face, chest, legs and head to gather the information.</p>
<p>The information they retrieve shows whether you&#8217;re asleep or awake and when you enter REM sleep. REM sleep is the rapid eye movement stage when you dream, but normally don&#8217;t snore. If you have sleep apnea, the doctors find that out too by monitoring not only your breathing and the number of times you stop breathing but also how the air flows into your body and changes to your oxygen level.</p>
<p>The sleep study, called a polysomnogram is normally only used if the doctor is concerned you have sleep apnea, violent sleep behavior or breathing disorders. Doctors also use a polysomnogram to see if someone has narcolepsy, when you suddenly nod off to sleep without realizing it. Doctors don&#8217;t use the test to simply to find if you snore, that is unless you have other symptoms besides just your sore throat.</p>
<p>You might wake up feeling overly tired, have an increase in your blood pressure, be crankier than usual and a headache in the morning or evening. You might have heartburn or a sour taste in your mouth at night, swollen legs, sweating or chest pain while you sleep. If your legs swell, that&#8217;s another symptom.</p>
<p>Loud snoring can be a symptom of sleep apnea, just as waking up several times in the night, tossing and turning in bed and choking or gasping spells. The choking could be the cause of your sore throat in the morning. There also is a link between acid reflux and sleep apnea. Acid reflux can create a sore throat due to the acid backing up your esophagus and burning it. Mention these symptoms to your doctor when you see him about your snoring.</p>
<p>Some people have more of a tendency toward snoring than others do. Those that are over forty, overweight, have large necks, males, have large tongue, tonsils or a small jaw, have a family with a history of sleep apnea, have GERD, acid reflux or have nasal obstruction from either allergies, sinus problems or a deviated septum.</p>
<p>While snoring can raise your blood pressure over time, sleep apnea can do that and cause stroke or heart failure. It can lead to diabetes, depression and make an ADHD patient worse. In most cases, snoring is a one if you charted out sleep related disorders and sleep apnea or other disorders are higher on the chart when it comes to damaging the body.</p>
<p>If you pursue the quest to find if you snore and come up with a resounding yes, a few things can help you stop your snoring. If you have a sinus problem or allergies, take care of those first. The allergies might be at the root of your snoring. If you&#8217;re overweight, by all means, lose weight. Snoring comes from a collapse or closure of the airways.</p>
<p>Excess weight means excess pressure on your air passages and that makes them narrow, thus creating a trumpet of sound. If you drink before going to bed, stop. The relaxation from the alcohol also relaxes the muscles in the mouth and throat and can create snoring.</p>
<p>If you smoke, stop. Cigarettes contain irritants that can cause your throat to swell and close the air passage.</p>
<p>If you drink milk before bed, stop it this minute. Milk can create mucous and mucous can block airways.</p>
<p>Aging causes snoring also. As you age, you lose muscle tone to the throat and mouth. Of course, that alternative to aging isn&#8217;t something anyone wants, so don&#8217;t worry about that potential.</p>
<p>If you only have a sore throat in the morning and no other symptoms, try a humidifier in your room before going to bed. Take up yoga to tighten the muscles in the throat or learn to breathe through your nostrils. Don&#8217;t worry about snoring if you aren&#8217;t disturbing anyone and a scratchy throat is your only symptom.</p>

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		<title>Can My Dentist Supply and Fit Me with an Effective Snoring Mouthguard?</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/can-my-dentist-supply-and-fit-me-with-an-effective-snoring-mouthguard/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Dec 2010 04:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dentist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dentist snoring mouthguard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snoring mouth guard]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[While a mouthguard often helps, you may have other issues occurring in your breathing passage that a mouthguard won't correct. It pays to visit a dentist or sleep specialist in this case.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A snoring mouthguard is effective for many people, however, not all of them. The primary reason for snoring is the deciding factor. Many people snore because their mouth relaxes and the tongue falls to the back of the throat, semi-blocking and in some cases where sleep apnea is present, completely blocking the airway. When this occurs, the forced air causes the soft tissues of the palate to vibrate and your snore.</p>
<p>There are other reasons for air passage to be narrow; the tongue falling to the back of the throat might not be the only cause your snoring. The older you are and flabbier your throat muscles, the more you have a tendency to snore.</p>
<p>This is because the air passage can collapse without the proper muscles to hold it into place. In this case, the mouthguard holds your mouth in and structures in the correct position so they don&#8217;t collapse. It can help to prevent snoring of this type.</p>
<p>If you have blocked nasal passages or a sinus problem, you might also be a night rumbler. When your nose is stuffed or there is other blockage in the airway, it causes a vacuum by blocking the airway on inhalation. This leads to snoring. In this case, identifying the problem and clearing the sinuses or keeping the nose unstuffed is the surest cure for snoring.</p>
<p>Your body build also makes a difference. Every person&#8217;s throat is different. Some people have excessively large adenoids or tonsils and this can lead to snoring. A narrow throat caused by an enlarged palate or other larger structures in the throat area such as tonsils can lead to snoring.</p>
<p>A large uvula, the little fleshy piece that dangles in the back of the throat, also can lead to snoring. While a mouthguard can help with some types of snoring, only surgery can bring complete relief for this problem.</p>
<p>Carrying too much weight also contributes to snoring. Normally, if your weight is evenly distributed, you can carry more weight and still not snore. However, if you have an exceptional amount of weight around your neck and lack muscle tone, you probably snore.</p>
<p>Men who were body builders at one time and developed their body, including the neck muscles, then ceased working out, may not only notice their abdomen bulging, their spouses may comment on the nightly serenade they provide. This is because the enlarged muscles become flabby and lay on the airway causing snoring and apnea.</p>
<p>Smoking is not only detrimental to your health because of COPD and heart problems, it also make you a snorer. Smoking dries the lining of the throat and causes sinus problems and nasal stuffiness. When your nose stuffs up, it creates the vacuum, which in turn creates snoring.</p>
<p>Excess weight around the throat area, due to genetics, can also cause snoring. It often doesn&#8217;t take much weight to cause it. Just a few extra pounds can make a difference. When the person lay on his back, the weight combined with flabby throat muscles constricts the air and the person snores.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s why people often snore when they lie on their back and not their side. Relieving the weight by dropping just a few pounds might help stop the snoring more than a mouthguard will.</p>
<p>Alcohol consumption before bedtime relaxes you. Unfortunately, it also relaxes the muscles in the throat and can lead to snoring. This type of snoring is particularly dangerous if you&#8217;re prone to sleep apnea. Sleep apnea occurs when the throat completely blocks and no air passes. Those listening to the snorer hear the rhythmic snore and suddenly it ceases for a few seconds followed by a large explosive snort.</p>
<p>This occurs when the air passage blocks and no air enters. The snort is the body awakening the person to gasp a breath of air. When you have too much alcohol in your system, the potential to remain asleep and not rouse to get that air is great. You can suffocate in your sleep. If you snore, don&#8217;t drink before bed.</p>
<p>Mouthguards may or may not help this type of snoring, depending on other underlying problems, but limiting your alcohol consumption does and you don&#8217;t have to go to the dentist or doctor to do this.</p>
<p>Your sleep posture also affects whether you snore or not. However, this still has to do with other underlying problems. If you sleep on your back and have a flabby palate, are overweight or your tongue falls to the back of your throat, you&#8217;ll snore. Gravity pulls the excess flesh over the air passage. Even if you sleep on your side, the underlying problem still exists but your position prevents it from closing off breathing.</p>
<p>The best way to find if a mouthguard will be effective is to visit either your dentist or a sleep specialist. However, you can create your own snore reduction mouthguard on the cheap if you can&#8217;t afford to have one specially fitted.</p>
<p>You do this by purchasing a boil and bite mouthguard created for snoring and sold online. These are made of a thermoplastic material that softens when you boil it. Once boiled, you simply bite on the plastic and it forms to the shape of your mouth.</p>
<p>The primary difference between this type of mouthguard and those the dentist makes is the level of comfort. Normally those created by the dentists are often smaller and while they do the same job, can create discomfort. However, if you find this type of mouthpiece helps relieve snoring, you can then go to a dentist and have him fit you for one made especially for your mouth.</p>
<p>If you have sleep apnea, it&#8217;s very dangerous and you should seek the advice of a dentist or sleep specialist. While a mouthguard often helps, you may have other issues occurring in your breathing passage that a mouthguard won&#8217;t correct. It pays to visit a dentist or sleep specialist in this case.</p>
<p>Some people with multiple issues find that not only the sleep guard to hold their jaw and tongue in place, but also surgical removal of tissue, weight loss and ceasing smoking or alcohol consumption is the only way to stop their snoring and sleep apnea.</p>

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		<title>How Snoring Can Affect Your Marriage/Relationship</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/how-snoring-can-affect-your-marriagerelationship/</link>
		<comments>http://snoringmouthguard.net/how-snoring-can-affect-your-marriagerelationship/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Dec 2010 10:21:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Lifestyle changes to stop snoring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Snoring and relationships]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social effects of snoring]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Dr. Laura Berman, a Chicago sex and relationship therapist, calls snoring a "big relationship divider" and advises couples with one member snoring to "Keep in the same bedroom at all costs, and if not, take time to cuddle and interact before going to separate bedrooms."]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Love can last through most things but somehow snoring can make a huge dent in it. It&#8217;s as though the vibration of the person snoring shakes the love right out of their partner. While the ideal situation is when no one snores, even when both parties snore it creates problems.</p>
<p>Snoring deprives the non-snorer of sleep and even though logically they know the snorer isn&#8217;t doing it intentionally, they get angry. In addition, snoring often deprives couples of important moments together that are necessary for a good relationship.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re either part of a snore fest when the lights go down, as a participant or part of the audience, you&#8217;ll understand how frustrating the snoring becomes. After months of attempting to tolerate the snorer, you find yourself sleep-deprived and glassy-eyed when you finally give up and ask the offending party to sleep on the couch or you take shelter in a room down the hall. You might not be angry but simply desperate for a good night&#8217;s sleep.</p>
<p>The first few nights are the most difficult. You feel like a traitor to your melodic partner but survival instincts are often stronger than romance and so off you go to another room or you finally nudge the snorer in the ribs hard enough to wake them and ask them to depart so you can finally sleep.</p>
<p>One night turns into two, two into four and eventually the nudge in the ribs is easier to do or the journey down the hall is less traumatic. In fact, it becomes so easy; the audio injured partner simply goes directly to the other room or points the noisy counterpart in that direction before the symphony begins.</p>
<p>The resentment over the snoring isn&#8217;t logical but it does exist. It&#8217;s builds like the irritation from the toilet seat remaining in an up position making the trip to the bathroom in the dark a dangerous journey where one receives a thorough backside washing if you sit without checking the position.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the resentment couples build after years of arguing over where to squeeze the toothpaste tube or how to put the toilet paper to roll in the holder. It&#8217; not always subtle but does drive another small wedge in a relationship.</p>
<p>Snoring does more than just irritate the non-snorer; it deprives the couple of important time together. Once the tradition of separate beds begins, the cuddling and bedroom conversations cease. Some of most important and intimate conversations take place in the bedroom. They aren&#8217;t necessarily sexual in nature but the little incidences throughout the day, pushed to the back of the mind during the rush hours.</p>
<p>This type of intimate communication is necessary for a complete bond of the two people.&nbsp; It&#8217;s the intimacy of laughing together over silly things that happened or sharing outrage over the bad treatment at the office.</p>
<p>Cuddling is another factor important to a strong marriage or relationship and it often leaves when the nightly serenade begins. Physical bonding doesn&#8217;t come from sexual intercourse, although that&#8217;s part of it.&nbsp; If it did, some people would bond to several different people at one time. It comes from closeness and touching in small ways.</p>
<p>The hug before work, the nightly kiss, spooning during sleep and warming your feet on your partner&#8217;s legs all create the bond.&nbsp; This bonding goes AWOL when the two sleep apart. It plays an important part in foreplay and spontaneity, which keeps a relationship interesting.&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>
<p>The social time couples spend together right before falling asleep is crucial to a relationship, according to Paul Rosenblatt, social science professor at the University of Minnesota and author of &#8220;Two in a Bed: The Social System of Couple Bed Sharing, published by State University of New York in 2006.</p>
<p>Dr. Laura Berman, a Chicago sex and relationship therapist agrees. She calls snoring a &#8220;big relationship divider&#8221; and advises couples with one member snoring to &#8220;Keep in the same bedroom at all costs, and if not, take time to cuddle and interact before going to separate bedrooms.&#8221;</p>
<p>Berman also notes that using separate rooms for sleep should not be a lifestyle but rather a temporary solution for the problem of snoring.&nbsp; The couple should work on a solution where the separate rooms aren&#8217;t mandatory to maintain the relationship.</p>
<p>Those types of solutions vary. Some of the solutions can be as simple as lifestyle changes. One of the bigger contributors to snoring is excess weight. Snoring comes from the soft palate or tongue partially blocking the air passage. The blockage creates pressure on the area and causes vibration as the snorer breathes out. The excess weight adds extra pressure against the air passage and may even be the reason for snoring in the first place.</p>
<p>The potential to lose weight and eliminate snoring can become a reality for many people through diet and exercise.</p>
<p>Eliminating that nightcap can also put a dent in the nightly symphony. Alcohol before bedtime can relax a person but it can relax the muscles in the throat and neck as well, allowing them to press or obstruct the passageway for airflow.&nbsp; Even quitting smoking can cause a positive effect in the partners snore pattern.</p>
<p>Some experts believe smoking irritates the throat and causes slight swelling that ultimately leads to snoring. Others believe that the prolonged ingestion of nicotine causes nerve damage that ultimately affects the throat and leads to snoring. Regardless of the reason, there&#8217;s a direct correlation between smokers and snoring. Even those who experience chronic second hand smoke tend to snore.</p>
<p>However, not all solutions are this easy. Sometimes surgery or more radical solutions are necessary to stop the snoring. While it might seem drastic to have surgery when earplugs for the partner are far cheaper, snoring can also lead to sleep apnea. Sleep apnea occurs when the snorer actually stops breathing for a few seconds.</p>
<p>The sounds from sleep apnea are far more irritating than regular snoring because unlike regular snoring where the bed partner can actually get into the rhythm of the snorer, sleep apnea interrupts that rhythm. The snorer might have a consistent rhythm to their breathing and then, there&#8217;s silence for as long as 10 to 15 seconds.</p>
<p>The lack of oxygen awakens the snorer enough to take a deep breath and the routine continues through the night. Sleep apnea is dangerous and found to be the cause of many other health problems such as coronaries and even high blood pressure.</p>
<p>Snoring can create a split in the relationship through lack of intimacy but sleep apnea can create the split through illness and death. Even if the snoring partner doesn&#8217;t get physically ill, the lack of sleep can cause crankiness and depression. So if your partner snores, or if you&#8217;re the melodic one of the family, solve the problem for a better relationship, healthier lifestyle and a longer time together.</p>

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		<title>Stop Snoring by Changing Your Lifestyle</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/stop-snoring-by-changing-your-lifestyle/</link>
		<comments>http://snoringmouthguard.net/stop-snoring-by-changing-your-lifestyle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Dec 2010 09:03:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lifestyle changes to stop snoring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring with lifestyle changes]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Snoring is a problem often caused by lifestyle and because of that, you could also dismiss it by changing your lifestyle.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If your family actually goes to the trouble of recording your nightly snoring serenade, you probably have a problem with snoring. If you live alone, you might realize your problem by snorting yourself awake occasionally. We&#8217;ve all had that embarrassing moment of falling asleep in a lecture or meeting only to hear ourselves snort and awaken to glaring stares from the rest of the group. Snoring is a problem often caused by lifestyle and because of that, you could also dismiss it by changing your lifestyle.</p>
<p>What are some of the things that cause snoring? Overweight and overeating, lack of exercise, too much hooch, alcoholic beverage for those not familiar with the vernacular of the 20&#8242;s and 30&#8242;s, pharmaceutical sleep inducers such as Nytol, Sominex or prescription drugs, heavy smoking and improper sleep positions.</p>
<p>Sometimes those annoying sinus problems that keep you supplied with plenty of post-nasal drip also can create a problem with snoring, as do other types of congestion.&nbsp; Either way, snoring has been going on since time began. I would imagine the first cave wife turned her husband over because he was snoring and the noise might alert a predator.</p>
<p>While some snoring comes from old age. The aging process causes muscular weakness and the weakness causes the snoring.&nbsp; Unless there&#8217;s a new pill that stops aging, you&#8217;re pretty well stuck with that type of snoring unless you do exercises to develop your throat and facial muscles. &nbsp;</p>
<p>The first exercise involves sticking your tongue out.&nbsp; Because these look rather odd, you might want to practice them while you&#8217;re alone. They aren&#8217;t something you can do on your way to work while on the subway.</p>
<p>The <strong>facial exercises</strong> are relatively easy. There are four of them. First push out your tongue as far as it can go, hold that position for ten seconds and then pull it back into a relaxed position in your mouth. Follow with the second exercise where you attempt to touch your tongue to your nose. Hold it as far up as you can for ten seconds and then relax.</p>
<p>Finally, the last of the &#8220;stick your tongue out&#8221; exercises involves trying to touch your tongue to your chin. Push it out and down, hold for 10 seconds and relax. Follow these three with a huge, quite exaggerated smile. Smile until it hurts for 10 seconds. Relax your face and begin the group of four again. Do these exercises as many times as you can until you work up to at least 10 sets.</p>
<p>You can <strong>strengthen your throat</strong> with voice exercises. Start with Ka-ka-ka-ka-ka-ka, going up and down the scale at top volume. Then follow it with la-la-la-la-la and finally ma-ma-ma-ma-ma. Do it loudly enough that you feel the workout on your vocal chords but don&#8217;t over exercise so that it hurts. You don&#8217;t want to be hoarse the next day.</p>
<p><strong>Lose weight</strong></p>
<p>Since you&#8217;re more prone to snoring if you&#8217;re overweight, that brings to mind a second set of exercises that could help you. These, however, are the traditional ones that help you burn any fat that you might have developed. Fat presses against your throat, narrows the air passage and causes you to snore.&nbsp; Not only will you want to exercise, shedding a few pounds through a sensible diet can also help.</p>
<p>When you eat, <strong>consume smaller meals</strong> more frequently. Don&#8217;t eat right before bedtime. The pressure of the food against your diaphragm can cause snoring. Eat lighter foods that digest more easily and chew your food well. Food that sits undigested for a longer period, have the same effect as eating late at night. Avoid milk products and milk, particularly right before bedtime. Milk and milk products can cause mucus that can stuff you up and create a snoring machine.</p>
<p><strong>Don&#8217;t drink at night.</strong> While a little nip early in the day may not make you snore, that same nip you take to relax you might keep your spouse up all night when you do imbibe in the evening. Alcohol, just like some medications to help you sleep, causes the muscles to relax too much. It also can cause a dry irritated throat.</p>
<p>There also is a danger that snoring may come from sleep apnea. Sleep apnea comes from an obstruction. It involves loud snores followed by ten seconds or more of silence when there&#8217;s no air coming in or going out. The lack of oxygen signals the brain to inhale. If you&#8217;re drinking or taking prescription medication, it can dull your senses and slow the reaction to breathe again.&nbsp; Avoiding alcohol can help not only your spouse sleep, but also can prevent serious consequences if sleep apnea is present.</p>
<p><strong>Stop smoking</strong></p>
<p>One last vice to remove is smoking. Now that you&#8217;re exercising, not drinking, eating better and smaller meals, throw away those smokes too.&nbsp; There are many different chemicals in cigarettes that can irritate the lining of the throat and increase the likelihood of snoring. The same holds true for medications that dry the nasal passage or cause irritation. Anything you take, which increases irritation also can narrow the passage through minor swelling and cause snoring.</p>
<p><strong>Avoid allergens</strong> if you can. Allergies create the same problem as medications and cigarette smoking. They create mucus and swelling and increase the possibility of snoring. People with nasal polyps, colds and allergies tend to snore more than the general population. However, its tough to avoid these problems and simply taking care to avoid allergens or people with colds might be the best you can do.</p>
<p><strong>Mouth breathing</strong> is one cause of snoring. Keeping your nasal passages open can help reduce the chance of snoring. One method is to practice a yoga technique for breathing. Press the side of one nostril and breathe slowing in through the other nostril. Breathe out through your mouth. Do this ten times then switch the nostril you&#8217;re holding closed. Finally, inhale through both nostrils at once and breathe out through your mouth. Exhaling through the mouth doesn&#8217;t cause snoring but inhaling does. Practicing that breathing exercise can help develop a pattern of breathing that may extend to your sleep.</p>
<p><strong>Switching sleeping positions</strong> is an old trick that often works quite well. If you sleep flat on your back, the potential to snore is far more prominent than if you sleep on your side. You can attach a ball to the back of your pajamas and as you roll onto your back, it causes you to roll back onto your side and precludes snoring. There are simple devices you can purchase that do the same thing. It&#8217;s one simple lifestyle change that doesn&#8217;t cause deprivation.</p>

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		<title>Therapeutic Anti-Snoring Mouthguard</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/therapeutic-anti-snoring-mouthguard/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 06:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[anti snoring mouthguard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti snoring mouth guard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti snoring mouthpiece]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Anti snoring mouthguards (or mouthpieces) are much more comfortable than they look and they really are designed to help you sleep better and to help quit snoring.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Your wife is ready to leave you because of your snoring and you have woken yourself up several times by that loud noise you have been making. You&#8217;ve been feeling tired all day long and the constant fights over your snoring has only made you feel guilt, embarrassed and isolated all because of something you can&#8217;t help.</p>
<p>Finally, in desperation you have gone to your doctor and he has told you that you are suffering from Obstructive sleep Apnea (OSA) and that is the cause of your loud snoring. He has suggested that you see a dentist that specializes in OSA and get fitted for a therapeutic anti-snoring mouthguard.</p>
<p>Of course when you got home you immediately got online to find out just what one of these anti-snoring mouthguards were. Having looked at a few sites explaining these devices and looking at pictures of these sleep aids you find yourself asking what can be so therapeutic about these anti-snoring mouthguards.</p>
<p>They look like some kind of torture device to your inexperienced eye. You find yourself wondering if you are ever going to be able to sleep again wearing one of them.</p>
<p>Rest assured, even though they do look a little scary when viewed on a web page and even up close, they are much more comfortable than they look and they really are designed to help you sleep better and to quit snoring. Most of the therapeutic anti-snoring mouthguards today are designed to bring your lower jaw forward which keeps your tongue from falling back and blocking your airway when you sleep.</p>
<p>When your airway is blocked you aren&#8217;t getting enough air and that snoring sound is a reflection of this problem. So, the anti-snoring mouthguard is actually allowing you to get more air while you sleep which results in better sleep for both you and your spouse.</p>
<p><strong>Getting Used To The Therapeutic Anti-Snoring Mouthpiece</strong></p>
<p>That&#8217;s not to say that the first few nights you wear it you are guaranteed to drift off into uninterrupted slumber. For some these anti-snoring mouthpieces do take some getting used to. After all, most of us aren&#8217;t used to sleeping with things in our mouth and some people do find the feeling quite strange for a night or two and may have some trouble falling asleep.</p>
<p>There are also some people who experience excess saliva when wearing the mouthpiece and others who have some teeth and joint pain. This may mean that your mouthpiece needs some minor adjustments and you should call your dentist and explain the problem to him. Chances are, given a few minor adjustments and a few days to get used to the feel of your anti-snoring mouthpiece you will be sleeping like a baby.</p>
<p><strong>Will I Have To Sleep With This Mouthpiece Forever?</strong></p>
<p>In some cases patients, especially those with OSA do wear a therapeutic anti-snoring mouthpiece for the rest of their lives. However, in some cases these devices are used to help get you the air and sleep better while others issues that may be causing your sleep apnea are addressed. For example, people who are overweight may only need the mouthpiece until they lose enough weight to stop snoring.</p>
<p>In other cases throat, tongue and jaw exercises may result in less obstruction of the airway and you may no longer have to wear the mouthpiece. The important thing is that therapeutic anti-snoring mouthpiece is available to help you get the air you need, when you need it, for as long as you need it. Who knows, after wearing it a few months you may miss the feel of it in your mouth.</p>
<p><strong>The Right Kind Of Mouthpiece For You</strong></p>
<p>There are several different kinds of therapeutic mouthpieces and each kind has its own unique design and the cost will vary. When visiting your dentist to be fitted for one of these mouthpieces discuss all your options with him and answer all his questions as thoroughly and completely as possible and he will help you decide which style of mouthpiece will be the best suited and the comfortable for you.</p>

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		<title>Will I stop snoring if I play the didgeridoo?</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/will-i-stop-snoring-if-i-play-the-didgeridoo/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Sep 2010 14:19:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stop snoring didgeridoo]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In order to play the didgeridoo, you’ve got to have strong upper air-passage muscles. Playing the didgeridoo requires you to develop what is known as “circular breathing”.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This may sound like a funny question, perhaps even a touch of sarcasm. But, reality moves in strange and wondrous ways, and life is often stranger than fiction. Believe it or not, research has revealed that playing the didgeridoo can significantly diminish or eliminate both daytime sleepiness and&hellip;yes&hellip;snoring.</p>
<p>Snoring takes place because the upper part of the back of the throat becomes a little soft and moves downward somewhat into the air passage, partially obstructing breathing. This results in the sound of snoring; it&rsquo;s a subconscious attempt by the sleeping person to push that flap of skin out of the way so that more air can more easily flow into the lungs.</p>
<p>Needless to say, this has some negative side effects. Spouses or lovers of people who snore get woken up throughout the night, so that they don&rsquo;t get sufficient sleep. And the person who snores may awaken himself throughout the night as well. This at least partially accounts for the daytime sleepiness problem.</p>
<p>People who aren&rsquo;t getting sufficient sleep suffer from a lot of problems. Depending on how bad their sleep deprivation is, these problems can range from irritability to poor work performance to depression. It&rsquo;s also frightening to realize that people who are sleep-deprived get into twice as many car accidents as those who get sufficient rest.</p>
<p>Snoring can be so bad that people have resorted to surgery (which is hit and miss, at best, in its effectiveness); being hooked up to air-forcing machines at night (doesn&rsquo;t that sound like fun?); and to special inserts fitted over the teeth at night that push out the gums a little so as to allow more room for more air (supposedly pretty successful, but then there&rsquo;s the side effect of possibly pushing your teeth out of alignment and reported morning soreness of the mouth&hellip;and of course you remain dependent upon that little piece of plastic).</p>
<p>Snoring especially starts to afflict people who are over age 35, as by that time the muscles at the back of the throat have been worn down a little by the wear and tear of life and aging. This can have some negative effects on a marriage. Furthermore, that makes snoring a sign of possible aging, and we don&rsquo;t want any such signs!</p>
<p>So&hellip;back to the didgeridoo. This is that long, strange-sounding Australian Aboriginal wind instrument. A didgeridoo only plays one tone. Different didgeridoos play different tones, but these are typically C, C#, or D. Given this fact, this snake-like wind instrument is actually a rhythm instrument, not a melodic one. The player produces rhythms through the controlled breathing into the didgeridoo.</p>
<p>And that&rsquo;s where the aid with snoring comes in. Of necessity, in order to play the didgeridoo, you&rsquo;ve got to have strong upper air-passage muscles. Playing the didgeridoo requires you to develop what is known as &ldquo;circular breathing&rdquo;. This technique, long sought after by professional horn players, means that you are simultaneously breathing in (through your nose) and breathing out (through your mouth). Think that doesn&rsquo;t take some power in the upper air-passage muscles to pull off?</p>
<p>When those muscles are strong, the skin doesn&rsquo;t flap down into the throat and snoring does not take place.</p>
<p>A few years ago, some Swiss researchers got wind of the idea that didgeridoo players had relatively little problem with snoring regardless of age, and they wanted to see if practicing the instrument really could be used as a cure for the potentially dangerous condition of sleep apnea.</p>
<p>So they took in a group of 25 volunteers, all of whom reported problems with snoring and daytime drowsiness. One part of the group was given daily didgeridoo practice (20 to 40 minutes) for four months. The other group was put on a waiting list.</p>
<p>At the end of four months, everyone in the didgeridoo practicing group had significant improvement. All symptoms of drowsiness and snoring were significantly diminished or had disappeared. Their spouses and partners all reported better sleep, too. Meanwhile, the people on the waiting list still had their problems.</p>
<p>&#8220;Larger trials are needed to confirm our preliminary findings, but our results may give hope to the many people with moderate obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and snoring, as well as to their partners,&#8221; wrote the researchers.</p>
<p>It should be noted that nobody in these studies had severe, life-threatening sleep apnea. Even the didgeridoo might not be able to provide them with the cure they want. But for the common snorer, playing didgeridoo may be like a miracle&#8211;for her and for her husband!</p>

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		<title>Latest anti snoring devices news &#8211; Snoring is linked with impeding sleep apnea &#124; Snoring Devices and &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/latest-anti-snoring-devices-news-snoring-is-linked-with-impeding-sleep-apnea-snoring-devices-and/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 02:00:59 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti snoring devices]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Hey Readers! I&#8217;ve been comin across some crazy stuff the past few days from a few different blogs around the web which I just had to share with you. Check em out below&#8230; Snoring is linked with impeding sleep apnea &#124; Snoring Devices and &#8230; There have been over three hundred anti snoring different gadgets [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[</p>
<p>Hey Readers! I&#8217;ve been comin across some crazy stuff the past few days from a few different blogs around the web which I just had to share with you. Check em out below&#8230;
<p><a href="http://www.snoringdevices-snoringaids.com/snoring-devices/snoring-is-linked-with-impeding-sleep-apnea" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Snoring is linked with impeding sleep apnea | Snoring Devices and &#8230;</a></p>
<p>There have been over three hundred anti snoring different gadgets invented since the initial one varied years ago &#8211; the innovative<span id="more-231"></span> tennis-ball-in-a-sock that helped  forestall individuals from sleeping on their backs. Alternative devices &#8230;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.snoringdevices-snoringaids.com/snoring-devices/anything-that-relaxes-the-muscle-in-the-throat-too-much-will-cause-snoring" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Anything that relaxes the muscle in the throat too much will cause &#8230;</a></p>
<p>To combat the matter of snoring have been over three hundred anti snoring devices contrived since the initial one varied years ago &#8211;  the innovative.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.snoringdevices-snoringaids.com/snoring-devices/causes-of-snoring" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Causes of snoring | Snoring Devices and Snoring Aids</a></p>
<p>To combat the problem of snoring are over three hundred anti-snoring different gadgets contrived since the initial one many years ago &#8211;  the first tennis ball.</p>
<p>Hope you enjoy the read as much as I did and please if you have something to say, use the comments form below to let everyone know your thoughts.</p>
<p>Have a great day!</p>

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		<title>Latest anti snoring devices news &#8211; Snoring is a common symptom of sleep apnea &#124; Snoring Devices and &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://snoringmouthguard.net/latest-anti-snoring-devices-news-snoring-is-a-common-symptom-of-sleep-apnea-snoring-devices-and/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 May 2010 02:22:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[If you&#8217;ve been keeping up with my blog posts lately you&#8217;ll know I&#8217;ve come to adding a few news posts from around the web on this subject. I&#8217;ve got a couple more today that are new and updated, so let me know what you think of em&#8230; Snoring is a common symptom of sleep apnea [...]]]></description>
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<p>If you&#8217;ve been keeping up with my blog posts lately you&#8217;ll know I&#8217;ve come to adding a few news posts from around the web on this subject. I&#8217;ve got a couple more today that are new and updated, so let me know what you think of em&#8230;
<p><a href="http://www.snoringdevices-snoringaids.com/snoring-devices/snoring-is-a-common-symptom-of-sleep-apnea" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Snoring is a common symptom of sleep apnea | Snoring Devices and &#8230;</a></p>
<p>In an attempt to prevent snoring have been over three hundred anti snoring<span id="more-151"></span> devices devised since the initial one varied years ago &#8211;  the first tennis ball placed.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.antisnore.org/hivox-snore-stopper-electrodes/" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">hivox snore stopper electrodes | Snoring Cures &#8211; Resources To Help &#8230;</a></p>
<p>Anti-Snoring Device Snore Stopper watch uses natural biofeedback technique to reduce snoring frequency and volume. The bio-sensors of this snoring device can detect a sleeper&#39;s snore and issue a gentle electronic acupuncture massage &#8230;</p>
<p><a href="http://bedzine.com/blog/bed-technology/bed-gadgets/anti-snoring-device-snore-stopper-watch/" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Anti-Snoring Device Snore Stopper Watch</a></p>
<p>It is even capable of distinguishing between snoring and just other noises in general. This device will make slow down the frequency of your snoring as well as make it so you don&#39;t snore quite so loudly. The Anti-Snoring Device Snore &#8230;</p>
<p>Hope you enjoy the read as much as I did and please if you have something to say, use the comments form below to let everyone know your thoughts.</p>
<p>Have a great day!</p>

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