Prevention
To help prevent snoring, you can:
- Avoid the use of alcohol and medicines that slow your breathing, such as sleeping pills and tranquilizers.
- Eat sensibly, exercise, and stay at a healthy weight.
- Go to bed at the same time every night and get plenty of sleep. Regular sleep patterns help you sleep better, and more restful sleep may reduce snoring.
- Sleep on your side, not on your back. Sleeping on your back can increase snoring. Try sewing a pocket in the middle of the back of your pajama top, putting a tennis ball into the pocket, and stitching it closed. This will help keep you from sleeping on your back.
- Quit smoking. This reduces inflammation and swelling in the airway, which may contribute to the narrowing of the airway.
- Raise the head of your bed 4 in. (10 cm) to 6 in. (15 cm) by putting bricks under the legs of the bed. (Using pillows to raise your head and upper body will not work.) Sleeping at a slight incline can prevent the tongue from falling toward the back of the throat and contributing to a blocked or narrowed airway.
- Promptly treat breathing problems, such as a stuffy nose caused by a cold or allergies. Breathing problems can raise the risk of snoring.
Author:Maria G. Essig, MS, ELS
Last Updated: 01/30/2008