top of page

[World Sleep Day] Scientific Prevention and Treatment of Snoring Otorhinolaryngology Department at AmCare Health Guards Your Family’s Sleep Health

Snoring is more than just noise.In short, the harm of snoring:It causes repeated nighttime hypoxia and fragmented sleep, increasing the risk and treatment difficulty of systemic diseases such as hypertension, heart disease, cerebral infarction, and diabetes. The earlier you get checked and treated, the better for your health.

How to Prevent Snoring

· Maintain a healthy weight

· Sleep on your side as much as possible

· Avoid alcohol and excessive fatigue in the evening

· Use sleep aids with caution

What to Do If You Snore

1. Undergo sleep monitoring to assess the severity of apnea and hypoxia

Overnight polysomnography (PSG) in hospital is the gold standard for diagnosing sleep apnea.It simultaneously evaluates sleep structure, micro-arousals, abnormal leg movements, and other indicators to identify hidden causes of poor sleep quality.

Portable home sleep monitoring is also available, diagnosing sleep apnea by measuring blood oxygen, nasal airflow, and thoracoabdominal movement.

Snoring is more than just noise.In short, the harm of snoring:It causes repeated nighttime hypoxia and fragmented sleep, increasing the risk and treatment difficulty of systemic diseases such as hypertension, heart disease, cerebral infarction, and diabetes. The earlier you get checked and treated, the better for your health.

2. Electronic nasopharyngolaryngoscopy to evaluate anatomical obstruction

A thin endoscope directly visualizes the nasal cavity, nasopharynx, oropharynx, and hypopharynx to identify deviated nasal septum, turbinate hypertrophy, tonsillar hypertrophy, soft palate laxity, tongue base retraction, or narrow pharyngeal cavity.This provides clear evidence for structural causes of snoring and apnea, and guides personalized treatments such as surgery or oral appliances.

3. Start standardized treatment promptly if sleep apnea is diagnosed

Timely treatment prevents chronic diseases and supports management of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular/cerebrovascular diseases.


Method 1: Surgery to relieve anatomical narrowing

Deviated nasal septum, turbinate hypertrophy, tonsillar hypertrophy, soft palate laxity, tongue base retraction, and similar obstructions can be corrected surgically.


The Otorhinolaryngology Department provides minimally invasive procedures:septoplasty, submucosal turbinectomy, turbinate ablation, tonsil radiofrequency ablation, and palatopharyngoplasty.Surgical plans are personalized based on your condition.


Method 2: Positive airway pressure (PAP) ventilator to open collapsed airways

A non-invasive ventilator delivers pressurized air through a mask to hold open collapsed airways, improving apnea, snoring, and nighttime hypoxia.

Modern home ventilators are compact and quiet, reducing snoring disturbance for family members and chronic hypoxic damage to overall health.

Will I depend on the ventilator forever?Regular use helps resolve apnea in three ways:

✅ Improves insulin resistance and supports weight loss; every 10% weight loss reduces AHI (Apnea-Hypopnea Index) by 10 events/hour.

✅ Relieves hypopharyngeal reflux and mucosal edema, promoting airway remodeling and reducing narrowing.

✅ Restores central respiratory regulation.


Method 3: Oral appliance (mandibular advancement device) to widen the airway

For patients with mild-to-moderate sleep apnea, nasopharyngolaryngoscopy assesses whether mandibular advancement widens the airway.A custom oral appliance (anti-snoring device) is fitted jointly by ENT and dental specialists to reduce snoring and hypoxia.


Important Notice: Snoring and Mouth Breathing in Children

Snoring and mouth breathing in children require early evaluation and intervention to avoid harming growth and development.


Most cases are caused by adenoid and/or tonsillar hypertrophy, leading to sleep hypoxia and poor sleep quality.Long-term effects may include:facial skeletal abnormalities (adenoid facies), delayed growth, poor concentration, rhinitis, sinusitis, otitis media, and lung infections.

Even with mild snoring or only mouth breathing, evaluation is recommended if your child:frequently turns over, prefers prone sleeping, has poor concentration, delayed development, irregular teeth, upturned lips, receding chin, or enuresis.


Although adenoids may regress naturally around age 11, damage from years of snoring and mouth breathing does not disappear.Pathological hypertrophy due to chronic inflammation may persist lifelong.


Early intervention is strongly recommended if adenoid/tonsillar hypertrophy causes significant symptoms.


Comments


Start My Medical Treatment

Gender
Preferred Chinese cities for Medical Treatment:
bottom of page