7 Unusual Ways to Treat Snoring & Sleep Apnea


7 Unusual Ways to Treat Snoring & Sleep Apnea

If you suffer from obstructive sleep apnea, and you’re frustrated with conventional treatment options, you may feel an urge to look at alternative options. If you spend enough time researching this, you’ll find a number of strange, interesting and sometimes bizarre ways of treating sleep apnea. To save you some time, I’ve listed 7 unusual ways below, along with my personal opinions for why it may or may not work:

1. Singing for snorers. There are various programs that teach snorers ways of singing to tighten throat and tongue muscles which in theory can lessen the severity of snoring. I haven’t see any scientific studies validating this method, but I can imagine that singing in general can make you feel good. Singing or speaking is activated by the vagus nerve, which is a part of the parasympathetic nervous system, which is the relaxation half of the involuntary nervous system. Yoga-based deep breathing exercises also teach that exhalation should be longer than inhalation. Interestingly, exhalation, like when you sing, also stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system. When you spend a longer time exhaling than inhaling, you’ll definitely feel better.

2. Tongue exercises. Various programs are available over the internet to teach snorers tongue, mouth and throat exercises, presumably to keep the tongue’s resting position at the roof of the mouth, keeping the mouth closed and breathing more through the nose. By toning the tongue and throat muscles, it probably also causes less obstructions during non-REM deep sleep, when muscles are only partially relaxed.

3. Playing the didgeridoo. This Australian Aborigine wind instrument has been shown in a research study to significant lower sleepiness and apnea-hypopnea scores. The AHI dropped about 6 points (from an average of 21). Similar to singing, profound throat and tongue muscle control is thought to provide extra stimulation to the muscles, leading to less collapse.

4. Playing and oboe, bassoon, or English horn. These double-reeded instruments require much more intense lip and mouth motor control. Musicians playing these instruments were found to be significantly less susceptible to obstructive sleep apnea, as compared with regular wind instruments.

5. Acupuncture. A placebo controlled study showed that acupuncture lowered the AHI on average by about 50%. It probably somehow realigns the imbalance that’s seen of the two halves of the involuntary nervous system.

Warning: Don’t try these last two options on your own. These are investigational medical options and as far as I know, are not available to the general public.

6. Mirtazapine. This is an antidepressant that in clinical trials was found to lower the average AHI by about 50%. It probably somehow increases neuromuscular tone in non-REM deep sleep, or suppresses REM sleep so that you spend more time in non-REM deep sleep.

7. Glossopharyngeal nerve stimulator. A nerve stimulator is implanted onto the nerve that stimulates the tongue on one side. This is paced with the diaphragm. So when you inhale, it stimulates the tongue, tensing it and preventing collapse.

Here’s a bonus:

8. Provent nasal plugs. These are adhesive plugs that cover up each nostril, with a two-way hole: As you inhale, air flows smoothly, but when you exhale, there’s a little bit of resistance, building up pressure in your throat at the end of your breathing out cycle, preventing your throat from collapsing. It’s FDA approved for obstructive sleep apnea. It does seem to work to various degrees in different people. You need a prescription from a doctor to try it out.

Notice a common theme? Many of these options involve exercising the tongue and throat muscles, ultimately changing neuromuscular properties of the musculature. None of these work as well as the three conventional options for treatment (CPAP, dental devices and surgery), but worth looking into if nothing works.

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  1. #1 by snapdragon747 on April 1st, 2010

    LOL.
    I love this joke.

  2. #2 by WPMixer on April 1st, 2010

    I saw this on American Idol and I just had to look it up!

  3. #3 by Wordpress on April 1st, 2010

    Andrew Garcia….THE NEXT AMERICAN IDOL!!!

  4. #4 by jabelite on April 1st, 2010

    Good one Jabelite.!!!
    ha ha ha.!!!

  5. #5 by WPBlog Shop on April 1st, 2010

    super wirklich toll

  6. #6 by Blogger on April 1st, 2010

    is this the instrument played in the beginning of “intergalactic” by the beastyie boys?

  7. #7 by Free Blog on April 1st, 2010

    AWSOME!!!! dude it`s like you have a 1 man band

  8. #8 by Anonymous on April 1st, 2010

    J’aime beaucoup

  9. #9 by Amanda in the Sky on April 2nd, 2010

  10. #10 by Gypsy Dancer on April 2nd, 2010

    Yothu Yindi

  11. #11 by Gypsy on April 3rd, 2010

    use mineral oil, instead

  12. #12 by Anonymous on April 3rd, 2010

    Just got mine in the mail today!

  13. #13 by theflattestbattery on April 3rd, 2010

    First, why did you replace the wax? You normally shouldn't need to.

    Second, try using a form of paraffin wax, or at least that's what most dig' players I know use. Or you don't even need wax at all. Wikipedia seems to suggest beeswax, but as you found out, its too hard and to get it soft enough would take about an hour of constant playing.

    Quoth wikipedia:
    Traditional instruments made by Aboriginal craftsmen in Arnhem Land are sometimes fitted with a 'sugarbag' wax mouthpiece. This comes from wild bees and is black in appearance, with a distinctive aroma.

    If you can get your hands on some of that, I would say that would be ideal.

    I'm curious as to what kind of beeswax you used – there are many varieties, and most types of natural beeswax harden.

  14. #14 by evildnalor on April 3rd, 2010

    Part of the answer is in your question. He uses circular breathing which means he breathes in while blowing out. That gives the continuous sound with no breaks.
    It also requires that you use less lip pressure and a larger embouchure than on a trumpet. You have to think more like a tuba player than a trumpet player. The opening in the wax mouthpiece of the didgeridoo is very nearly the same size as a tuba mouthpiece. You just have to get the air column vibrating and maintain it. Don't tighten the lips down to a tight "soda bottle" size. That is what gives you the tight "dead trumpet" sound.
    Mainly, try to relax and let your lips flap. Later, after you've mastered the circular breathing and the basic tone, you can learn how to modify this to make the other sounds and the "ornaments".

    Here's a website that can get you started:

    http://aboriginalart.com.au/didgeridoo/dig_background.html

  15. #15 by Anonymous on April 3rd, 2010

    fckin beast

  16. #16 by Anonymous on April 4th, 2010

    would like to get some lessons for future projects

  17. #17 by Shifty on April 4th, 2010

    The Cheiftan can't hold anything but his staff. It is ok that he won't have an instrument, he will conduct the rest of the "band"

  18. #18 by Kambui Shumba on April 4th, 2010

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