View clinical trials related to Snoring.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to validate the downloadable mobile snore applications by polysomnography.
Intraoral Neuromuscular Training for Treatment of Snoring Objective Studies show that improving pharyngeal muscle tone can ameliorate obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and snoring. The study uses an intra-oral stimulation device (SnooZeal) aimed at a population of snorers. The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of intra-oral neuromuscular stimulation training during wakefulness on snoring. Methods This is a prospective study, recruiting up to 200 patients from the sleep clinics. In this study, subjects will use the intra-oral stimulation device once a day for 20 minutes each time for a period of 6 weeks. During these 6 weeks, subjects will complete a daily diary of the device use and any side effects or adverse events. Partners also complete a daily snoring score. Subjects will be followed-up for a further 2 weeks after treatment. They will complete Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and subjective sleep quality questionnaires for a further 2 weeks. Partners will also complete the post treatment snoring scores. Sleep study will be repeated. Outcome measures The objective evaluation will be based on pre- and post-treatment sleep studies, visual analogue scale (VAS) snoring scores, PSQI and subjective sleep quality questionnaire. All side effects and adverse events will be reported and acted upon according to the risk management structure.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the value of a video recording of the child sleep on smartphone made by the parents and comparing it to ventilatory polygraphy (PV) on the one hand and to the clinical evaluation method (clinical examination + Spruyt and Gozal score) on the other hand.
Currently, there is no pharmacological intervention capable of maintaining airway patency for the treatment of snoring and airflow limitation during sleep. Here we study the effect of pharmacological stimulation of the pharyngeal muscles on snoring severity, in a randomized quadruple-blind, crossover study.
To measure the effect of the DryMouth Shield on snoring.
Many pregnant women suffer from poor sleep quality and snoring. Evidence shows an increasing association between (1) sleep disordered breathing and (2) maternal cardiovascular disease and in-hospital death. Snoring is a variant of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and OSA during pregnancy is associated with higher risks for cesarean delivery, gestational hypertension, preeclampsia and preterm delivery. It may also impact fetal outcomes negatively. The purpose of this study is to determine whether sleep quality can be improved in pregnant women who snore by means of an oral appliance that opens the airway. Sleep quality is evaluated objectively using an un-intrusive home sleep test system.
Prospective Evaluation of a Palato-Pharyngeal Implant System (PPIS) for the Treatment of Snoring and Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSAS): A Pilot Study.
This study evaluates the efficacy, the tolerance and the acceptability/compliance of the nasal airway stent, Nastent, for the treatment of mild to moderate OSA and snoring in European adult patients without cardiovascular and/or respiratory comorbidities/disorders.
Adenotomy, together with tonsillectomy, belongs among the most frequently performed surgical procedures in paediatric patients. These surgical procedures are associated with the second highest incidence of post-operative nausea and vomiting (PONV) (following strabism correction surgery) in paediatric surgery. PONV is associated, apart from the discomfort for the child, with a number of complications: dehydration, metabolic disruption or danger of haemorrhage and aspiration of the gastric content. Adenotomy is a typologically completely different surgical procedure, with a different target structure of the surgery, and the length and invasiveness of the procedure. Thus, it is possible to expect a difference in PONV incidence when compared to tonsillectomy. Adenotomy is a surgical procedure performed namely in children of the pre-school age. This is associated, among others, also with the problem of objectivization of post-operative nausea, which is very difficult to verbalize in small children, being a subjective feeling of body discomfort. It is possible to expect that the overall incidence of PONV will be significantly underestimated.
The aim of this pilot study is to gain information on the ability of a continuous negative external pressure collar to safely reduce snoring in primary snorers, and if so to determine whether the reduction in snoring has benefits for both the snorer and the bed partner. This clinical trial will involve both the snorer and his or her bed partner, both of whom must qualify and provide informed consent for participation.