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Ronflement

Comment arrêter le ronflement qui gâche votre sommeil et votre relation

Deux personnes sur cinq ronflent — et les autres se mentent peut-être à elles-mêmes ! Les enquêtes suggèrent que plus d'hommes que de femmes ronflent, bien que, étrangement, on suspecte que les femmes soient simplement moins disposées à l'admettre.

Video picks for Sommeil et insomnie

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What is snoring?

Snoring is just noisy breathing, caused by the soft tissues of your nose or upper airways vibrating when you're drowsy or asleep. Anything that partly blocks those airways, or makes them more floppy and prone to collapsing down on each other, increases your risk of snoring.

Snoring might prove to be detrimental to your marriage but luckily, in most cases, it isn't seriously harmful to health. There are a couple of exceptions though.

It's easy to joke about but sometimes snoring is more than a nuisance. If you're a regular snorer, and particularly a loud snorer, you may well have a condition called l'apnée obstructive du sommeil. In this condition, you stop breathing for 10 seconds or more in your sleep, and wake up briefly each time you stop breathing.

Perhaps not surprisingly, this leads to sufferers feeling chronically tired in the daytime, even if they aren't aware of waking. This condition is definitely more common in men, as well as in people who are overweight and middle-aged. They tend to be very loud snorers, and the condition is often diagnosed by their partner, who lies awake waiting for them to start breathing again. Fortunately, it usually responds well to treatment.

So if you think you or your partner might have obstructive sleep apnoea, do speak with your GP, particularly if the following applies:

  • You wake up gasping in the night regularly.

  • Your partner says you stop breathing during the night.

  • You are feeling too tired or sleepy during the day to do the things you need to do, like work or driving safely.

  • Your snoring is really affecting your partner or your relationship.

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Otherwise, simple lifestyle measures can make a difference and improve the situation for you and your partner.

Good oral health

Dentist and breath specialist Dr Harold Katz comments: "As well as the inevitable nuisance to snorers and their families alike, snoring also has a damaging impact on our oral health. Some of the most common mouth-related complaints of Britain's 15 million snorers include bouche sèche, mal de gorge et morning breath. The good news is that these conditions can be managed successfully by adopting a robust oral hygiene regimen."

He reveals that the best plan of action is to brush, floss and rinse regularly but steer clear of alcohol-based mouthwashes that can further contribute to dry mouth.

Faites de l'exercice régulièrement

Regular faire de l'exercice to help you lose weight can also help. People who are en surpoids ou obèses are much more likely to have airways narrowing.

Get help for allergies

A blocked nose also makes you a prime candidate - your chemist can advise about strips to put over the bridge of your nose, which may help, or you can talk to the pharmacist or GP about a nasal spray if you suffer from rhume des foins ou rhinite allergique, which makes your nose blocked and itchy.

Sleep on your side

Your airways are also more likely to get blocked if you sleep on your back. It's worth investing in a special pillow or bed wedge to encourage sleeping on one side. If all else fails, a tennis ball could be your best ally. Seriously! Place two or three tennis balls into a pocket on the back of a t-shirt. This will make it too uncomfortable for you to sleep on your back.

Ditch the nightcap

Taking sleeping tablets or drinking alcohol before going to bed tends to make snoring worse because they relax the soft tissues of the upper airways.

Arrêtez de fumer

And, as if you needed any other excuse to cesser de fumer, guess what - giving up the evil weed could cure your snoring!

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About the authorView full bio

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Dr Sarah Jarvis

SEO Executive

MA (Cantab), BM, BCh (Oxon), DRCOG, FRCGP, MBE

After training in medicine at Cambridge and Oxford, Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE became a GP.

About the reviewerView full bio

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Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGP

Médecin généraliste, Auteur médical

MBChB (1992), DRCOG, DFFP, MRCOG (Part 1) MRCGP (2007), DFSRH (2013), MSc - medical education (2020)

Dr Hayley Willacy was an NHS GP working in northwest England, who retired from clinical practice in 2022 after 30 years. 

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