Nov 18 2008

Habitual snoring may be behind women’s daytime fatigue

A new study by researchers from Sweden has revealed that in women, habitual snoring may be an independent cause of excessive daytime sleepiness and daytimefatigue, regardless of sleep apnea occurrences.

For the study, the researchers performed polysomnography on 400 randomly selected women, aged 20 to 70 years.

The apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) was calculated, and women who acknowledged snoring loudly and either disturbingly often or very often were considered habitual snorers.

The researchers found that habitual snoring was independently related to excessive daytime sleepiness, falling asleep involuntarily during the day, waking up unrefreshed, daytime fatigue, and dry mouth on awakening, even after adjusting for AHI, age, BMI, smoking, total sleep time, percentage of slow-wave sleep, and percentageof rapid eye movement sleep.

Researchers, therefore, concluded that snoring is an independent cause of excessive daytime sleepiness and not merely a proxy for sleep apnea.

This study is published in the November issue of the journal Chest. (ANI)

Related posts:

  1. Sleepiness : Intensity of snoring sounds linked to sleepiness
  2. Study sheds new light on link between snoring and cognitive deficit in kids
  3. Surgery unlikely to cure obese kids with sleep disorders
  4. Snoring leaving Brit couples sleepless!
  5. Sleep apnea sufferers more likely to have unhealthy food


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