How Snoring Can Hurt Your Heart Key West FL

If your partner is a snorer, you're all too familiar with this irritating habit. But did you know that in addition to be a nighttime nuisance, snoring can also be downright dangerous? In fact, research suggests that heavy snoring may raise the risk of cardiovascular disease.

William Hermann Greenwood, MD
305-294-3128
PO Box 2520
Key West, FL
Scott Hall
(305) 295-3838
3138 Northside Dr
Key West, FL
Thomas George Moriarity
(305) 239-4600
1300 Douglas Cir
Key West, FL
Michael Denis Burton
(305) 294-8900
1446 Kennedy Dr
Key West, FL
George Dwight Peterson
(305) 293-9555
5450 Macdonald Avenue
Key West, FL
John Craig Langley, MD
305-295-8181
1107 Key Plz Ste 211
Key West, FL
John Ray Van Tuyl
(305) 295-7550
1501 Government Rd
Key West, FL
Teresa E Castro Rojas, MD
305-292-6885
1107 Key Plz Ste 280
Key West, FL
Adrienne M Curran
(305) 296-4399
540 Truman Ave
Key West, FL
Jerome Covington
(305) 296-8593
3134 Northside Dr
Key West, FL
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How Snoring Can Hurt Your Heart

If your partner is a snorer, you're all too familiar with this irritating habit. But did you know that in addition to be a nighttime nuisance, snoring can also be downright dangerous?

 In fact, research suggests that heavy snoring may raise the risk of cardiovascular disease. Obstructive sleep apnea (in which snoring is often a symptom) is a condition in which a person briefly stops breathing at night. This condition "has deleterious effects on your overall well being, and these patients are at an increased cardiovascular risk overall," says Dr. Leo Pozuelo, associate director of the Bakken Heart Brain Institute at the Cleveland Clinic.

According to a joint statement from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology, researchers must work to understand just how cardiac disease and various forms of sleep apnea are related. Sleep apnea is already widespread, and as more and more Americans become obese, it may increase further since obesity is a major cause of sleep apnea, according to the AHA.

" Sleep apnea or sleep disordered breathing is one that we're getting more and more interested in because we see a very strong association with strokes, heart attacks, and other cardiovascular problems," says Dr. Melvyn Rubenfire, director of Preventative Cardiology at the University of Michigan Health System's Cardiovascular Center, as reported in Heart Disease Weekly.

Certain brain chemicals meant to trigger breathing may not be stimulated during sleep apnea, according to Heart Disease Weekly. A person may stop breathing without this stimulation and if breathing stops, oxygen levels drop and both hormones and adrenaline rise. These hormones can lead to heart irregularities and high blood pressure, and can trigger a heart attack, Heart Disease Weekly reports...

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