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სუნთქვა BODY HANDBOOK
სუნთქვა · §24
Snoring
You snore. You also, somewhere along the line, became "a tired person" — earlier coffee, an afternoon you can't quite remember, an evening you can't quite be present for. There is roughly a coin-flip chance those two facts are the same fact: an airway that closes dozens of times a night while you sleep, and a body that never gets the recovery the night was supposed to do. Untreated, that pattern roughly triples cardiovascular mortality in the long cohorts. Diagnosed, it is one of the most reversible problems in adult medicine — a cheap home test, a device most people get used to in a week, and the version of you that has afternoons back.
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What looks like the household joke is, in middle age, the strongest single sentinel for sleep apnea — the thing that, untreated, raises long-term cardiovascular mortality more than almost anything else in this catalogue. The test is cheap, runs in your own bed, and the treatments work; the gain — for you and the person sleeping next to you — is measured in restored hours and in years of life. The hardest part is the day you decide to find out.

The pharynx — the soft tube behind your tongue — is the only stretch of your airway with no bone holding it open. Awake, you don't notice; small muscles keep it wide. Asleep, those muscles relax, the tube narrows, and the air you pull in starts to vibrate the soft tissue at the back of your mouth — the curtain of soft palate, the uvula, the base of the tongue. That vibration is the snore. The same narrowing, taken one step further, is the airway briefly closing — and that is sleep apnea Veasey and Rosen 2019.

Three things make the tube vulnerable. Anything that takes up room inside it: weight around the neck, large tonsils, a thick tongue. Anything in the bone scaffold that makes the tube smaller to start with: a recessed jaw, a narrow palate, a low-positioned hyoid bone. And anything that blocks the nose enough to push you into mouth-breathing — a deviated septum, allergies, polyps — because a mouth-open posture drops the tongue backward and narrows the airway further.

Then there are the things you do that tip a borderline airway over the edge for the night. Alcohol within a few hours of sleep selectively softens the very muscles holding your airway open; the same drink that doesn't bother you on Tuesday turns benign snoring into apnea on Friday Issa and Sullivan 1982. Benzodiazepines, opioids, and most prescription sleep aids do the same. Sleeping on your back lets gravity drop your tongue and soft palate against the back of your throat — in patients who are "positional," supine roughly doubles the apnea count compared with their side Cartwright 1984.

How likely is your snoring to be something

Pure snoring without the airway actually closing is harmless to the snorer — annoying, not dangerous. The reason it matters is what it predicts. In the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort, the foundational dataset of the field, 24% of men and 9% of women aged 30 to 60 hit the diagnostic threshold for obstructive sleep apnea on overnight monitoring, and habitual snoring was the single best symptomatic predictor Young et al. 1993. With today's body weights and updated scoring, the same group reset prevalence higher — roughly 14% of men and 5% of women at moderate-or-worse severity Peppard et al. 2013.

The numbers shift with definitions; the rank order doesn't. If you are a middle-aged adult who snores most nights, the probability you have undiagnosed sleep apnea is somewhere in the 30 to 50 percent range. That's not a worry to file under "maybe one day" — it's a coin flip you should resolve.

What untreated apnea actually costs you

The danger of habitual snoring is what it usually is — apnea — and the danger of untreated apnea is one of the largest in this catalogue. The Wisconsin cohort, followed for eighteen years, saw the severe-apnea group die at roughly three times the rate of comparable non-apnea adults Young et al. 2008. A Spanish cohort followed for ten years saw untreated severe apnea nearly triple the rate of fatal cardiovascular events compared with healthy controls; the patients who used a CPAP machine every night looked indistinguishable from those controls Marin et al. 2005. Stroke incidence roughly doubles in untreated disease Yaggi et al. 2005. Hypertension follows a dose-response — the more apneas per hour, the higher your blood pressure climbs over the next four years Peppard et al. 2000. Untreated drivers with apnea crash their cars at about two and a half times the rate of comparable non-apnea drivers Tregear et al. 2009.

Day to day, what this looks like is the years of "I'm just a tired person." The coffee earlier, the afternoon you don't quite remember, the meeting you white-knuckled. The version of focus you used to have, which you assumed left you because you got older. The mood that frays at 6pm for reasons you can't name. None of it feels like a medical emergency; that's the point. The damage is mostly silent until it isn't — until the morning the blood pressure reading is alarming, or the cardiologist mentions atrial fibrillation, or the face in the mirror has the puffy, dark-circled look of someone who hasn't really slept in a decade because their vascular system hasn't really rested in a decade.

The other side of the bed gets hit too. Partners of habitual snorers lose roughly an hour of sleep a night to noise and the bracing-for-the-next-snore vigilance that comes with it; the long-term effects on partner sleep quality, mood, and relationship satisfaction are real and measured Beninati et al. 1999. People stop telling you they're tired around the second year because what's the point. The first sign your partner gets back from your treatment is that they stop tiptoeing to bed an hour later than you to outrun the noise.

What to actually do

Three steps, in order.

Underneath all of that sits a foundation that helps every snorer, with or without apnea — and that you can start tonight, without waiting for the test result.

The home test is roughly $150–500 out of pocket and is usually insurance-covered with prior authorisation; CPAP rentals are roughly $50–100 a month in the US under standard durable-medical-equipment coverage; a custom dental device runs $1,500–2,500, often partly covered by insurance or HSA. The behavioural side costs nothing.

Where this goes wrong in practice

The most common reason snoring never gets found and treated is that the snorer sleeps alone, has no one to report the pauses, and assumes their tiredness is just life. The second most common is the partner who has stopped noticing — you adapt to a noise faster than you'd think. The third is the woman whose apnea was missed because the diagnostic instinct in primary care is still calibrated to loud-snoring middle-aged men: women present more often with insomnia, fatigue, and low mood, and get sent home with sleep-hygiene tips instead of a sleep study.

The most common reason treatment fails is CPAP non-adherence. The mask is awkward the first week, the air is dry without humidification, the hose tangles. Most of these are solvable with a different mask shape, heated humidification, or a pressure adjustment. The point is to try a second mask, not to give up on the machine. A properly fitted custom dental device is the right next call if CPAP is genuinely unbearable; the over-the-counter boil-and-bite versions don't fit well enough to be the same intervention.

What most people get wrong

"Snoring is just snoring." Primary snoring without apnea is harmless to your body; the partner cost is real but the medical cost is small. The reason snoring matters is the base rate of underlying apnea — roughly one in three to one in two middle-aged habitual snorers has it. Test first; reassure second.

"Apnea is for fat older men." Half true. Apnea is more common with weight and age, and substantially more common in men before menopause. It also shows up in lean adults with the wrong jaw shape, in women — who hit prevalence parity after menopause — and in younger adults whose airway anatomy was never quite generous. Lean apnea is real, and under-diagnosed.

"I don't gasp at night, so I don't have apnea." Witnessed gasping is highly specific — if your partner sees it, you almost certainly have it — but it's poorly sensitive. Plenty of people with severe disease have flow-limited breathing that never builds to a dramatic gasp. The only way to know is a test.

"CPAP is the only option." It's the best for moderate-to-severe disease and worth the adherence fight, but it's not the only door. A custom dental device, positional therapy, weight loss, and — for selected patients — implanted nerve stimulation each have a real place. The choice depends on your severity, your anatomy, and what you'll actually use.

"Nasal strips fix it." A blocked nose makes snoring worse, and nasal strips do help mouth-breathers fall asleep a little easier. They are a comfort intervention, not a treatment for apnea. If they make a difference for you, take that as evidence your nose deserves a real evaluation, not as a finished solution.

What changes when you treat it

For the apnea group, the gain is large and arrives in two waves.

The first wave is within days to weeks of starting treatment. The afternoon wall lifts. The version of focus you'd assumed was gone comes back. You stop reaching for the third coffee because the second one is doing its job again. Your partner — who you had stopped really hearing complain about the noise — sleeps. Actually sleeps. They tell you, almost shyly, that they had forgotten what it was like to share a bed.

The second wave is the long one. The heart attack you didn't have, the stroke that didn't take a Tuesday morning from you, the cardiovascular risk that — in the long cohorts of treated patients — looks like the risk of someone who never had apnea at all Marin et al. 2005. Blood pressure typically drops a few points, and more in patients whose hypertension has been hard to control. The driving-crash risk falls back toward baseline with adherent treatment Tregear et al. 2009. None of it is dramatic in the moment; it accumulates as years you got to keep.

For primary snorers without apnea, the gain is more local — a quieter household, a partner who sleeps through the night, a bedroom that stops being two beds in the same room. Smaller, but real, and it lands within a week of whatever fix actually works for you.

Adjacent topics worth knowing about: sleep apnea itself as a stand-alone subject, including the central (non-airway) variety that needs a different workup; alcohol as a sleep substance specifically — the snoring effect is one part of a larger sleep penalty; mouth tape as a tool for the subset of snorers whose problem is habitual mouth-breathing through an open airway; and the broader circadian-alignment stack (morning light, consistent wake times) that won't fix apnea but will keep the rest of your sleep working while you sort it out.

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