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More Snoring Facts
(Snoring in the News - look below)
We know the new SnorEnder can help most adult snorers - those who don't have obstructive sleep apnea - to reduce their snoring. That's why we give you a full year to try it. NO RISK, and better sleep. Who wouldn't want that? The SnorEnder doesn't work for everyone - nothing does that - but slightly more than 95% of the hundreds of satisfied SnorEnder users all over the USA and even as far away as Australia find that it does help reduce or even stop most of their snoring.
We get letters and phone calls from wives (and husbands, too!) that tell us how well it works for them. And while we can't guarantee that the new SnorEnder will stop all your snoring, it does help more than 95% of those who use it. So, how much is a good night's sleep worth to you?
Snoring Is A TOUGH Problem
Chronic, loud, non-apnea snoring isn't easy to stop. If it was, would you still be snoring? There are NO cures, no shortcuts - not yet!. Not even the latest (and expensive) snoring surgery can honestly promise that you will never snore again. If you want the quiet night's sleep you need to be healthy and happy, you have to reduce the snoring where it starts.
For more than 85% of all non-apnea snorers, this means closing the open mouth. That's why we urge you to learn about your snoring: what causes it, what can help reduce it, what works for you. And see your doctor to make sure that you don't have sleep apnea. Isn't that just common sense?
Close Your Mouth, Avoid Sleep Apnea?
Possibly. The findings from a multi-year study of chronic snorers diagnosed with OSA seem to indicate that a major reason many people have this disorder may simply be due to the fact that they can't breathe properly through their nose during sleep. This forces them to breathe through their open mouth, and that may be a factor in the development of some types of apnea.
See your doctor if you have the symptoms of sleep apnea.
What could this mean for you? If you keep your mouth closed while you sleep and breathe properly through your nose, you may not develop some kinds of sleep apnea. But, we must caution you - these studies are new. Much more study must be done to confirm or disprove the findings. ONLY your doctor can diagnose or treat sleep apnea.
OSA & Nasal Breathing Studies
European and American researchers recently discovered that fixing the nasal obstructions or chronic nasal congestion that many OSA patients suffer from actually helped reduce or even eliminate OSA in many cases. While much more research is needed before any definitive conclusion can be drawn, this really is just a common sense discovery, isn't it? We humans were designed to breathe through our noses, not the mouth.
See your doctor for more information.
You may snore because you breathe through your open mouth. Since you can't breathe easily and properly through your nose, you're probably going to keep on snoring until you get the nose problem fixed. If your loud snoring is due to your mouth falling open during sleep (like more than 85% of non-apnea snorers, according to the U.S. Government) and you don't have OSA, the SnorEnder really can help stop your snoring.
Sleep apnea is not something that can be self-treated, and the SnorEnder is not intended to offer any relief for this potentially life-threatening sleep disorder. Only FDA-approved apnea devices should be used, and only under your doctor's care.
ONE YEAR
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE*
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gives you a ONE YEAR
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Why do we?
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Because we believe in our products and our customers.
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Because you didn't learn to snore through your mouth in a few short weeks - It takes time to unlearn bad mouth-breathing habits. We want you to STOP the snoring - that take a little time.
You have NOTHING to lose, NO RISK, and a
better night's sleep to gain. ORDER NOW!

Snoring In the News
(articles are briefly excerpted under U.S. FAIR USE laws
and are included here for informational purposes only)
BBC - Sleepers 'at risk' from jet noise (and snoring)
Night-time noise from aircraft or traffic raises blood pressure even while people sleep, an international study suggests. Researchers monitored 140 sleeping volunteers in their homes near Heathrow and three other big European airports. Volunteers' blood pressure increased after exposure to a noise louder than 35 decibels - whether it comes from overhead aircraft, or snoring. The study is reported in the European Heart Journal.
BBC - Three-quarters of Britons snore (not just a US problem)
Three-quarters of British adults are snorers, and one in three snores so badly it stops their partner from sleeping, research has found. The study, commissioned by hotel chain Travelodge. The poll, of 1,788 adults, found 21% blamed snoring for making them feel less sexy in the bedroom. The survey identified five distinct types of snorer:
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The Snorter (18%): Distinguished by a rapid blowing of air through the nostrils and mouth, similar to the sound of a horse snorting.
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The Snorchestra (12%): Typified by long, low snores that gradually build into a deafening crescendo.
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The McEnroe (10%): Distinguished by violent grunting sounds, similar to the noise made by tennis stars when competing.
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The Walrus (8%): Typified by continuous groaning noises when sleeping.
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The Old Banger (5%): Sounds like a broken car with a spluttering engine.
BBC - Snoring 'could run in families'
Snoring may run in families, a study by US scientists says. Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital found children whose parents snore have a three-fold increased risk of being noisy sleepers themselves. But UK experts said the link was likely to be related to families being obese - half of snoring is related to weight. The study, based on interviews with 681 families and published in the Chest journal, also suggested a link between snoring and allergies. Researchers found children who tested positive for atopy, an earlier indicator for the development of asthma and allergies, were twice as likely to snore as those who did not.
The researchers said it was likely allergy-related respiratory diseases were causing the snoring. Studies of older children and adults have linked snoring to behavioural problems, mental impairment, and heart and metabolic disease.
BBC - Women 'too meek' over men snoring
Women should stand up for their right to have a full night's sleep - even if their partner snores, researchers say. Those who listen passively to the dulcet tones of their soundly-sleeping partner may be missing out on up to five hours' sleep a week, they say. University of Surrey researchers, who have spoken to 25 couples so far, found plenty of women snore too - but men are much more likely to wake them up. Sleep experts said there were ways for people to stop themselves snoring.
Missing out on sleep can lead to sleepiness in the daytime, potentially affecting performance at work and ability to drive safely. Moving rooms While snoring problems were reported, none of those questioned, who range in age from 20 to their late 50s, had sleep disorders, such as sleep apnoea.
Men were the snorers in some of the couples, while in others, they were the women. Some women moved to another room in order to get some rest. Women seem to be embarrassed about admitting to snoring, yet it's important that they - as well as men - seek advice on whether their snoring is damaging their health. Snoring could have a devastating effect on relationships, with some couples splitting up because of it.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/4341199.stm (FAIR USE, excerpted) Published: 2005/03/14 00:09:57 GMT © BBC MMVIII
Reuters - Snoring found to lead to bronchitis
CHICAGO - People who snore are more likely to develop chronic bronchitis, the hacking cough most often associated with cigarette smoking or breathing polluted air, Korean researchers reported on Monday. Why snoring might lead to bronchitis is not clear, said a team led by Inkyung Baik of Korea University Ansan Hospital in South Korea.
The report, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, covered 4,270 men and women between 2001 and 2006. Of the group, 314 came down with chronic bronchitis... snoring at baseline and identified incident cases of chronic bronchitis during a four-year follow-up period. The investigators concluded that people who snored five nights a week or less were 25 percent more likely to develop bronchitis than those who never snored. The risk was 68 percent higher for those who snored six to seven times a week. (Reporting by Michael Conlon; editing by Maggie Fox)
Copyright 2008 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved.
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=4205594
(FAIR USE, excerpted) This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures
Our take on this finding is that open-mouth snoring is an irritant to sensitive tissues. The mouth and throat tend to dry, and the vibration, dryness and possibly particulate matter inhaled through the mouth can cause, over time, things to happen. Now, if they did a study contrasting open-mouth snorers with snorers who were able to keep the mouth closed...?
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Snoring Information Links
These links are provided as an informational service. We can't vouch for any content.
http://www.putanendtosnoring.com/remedies.htm - SnorEnder mentioned favorably
www.medicinenet.com/snoring/article.htm www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/snoring.html
www.mayoclinic.com/health/snoring/DS00297
www.stanford.edu/~dement/snoring.html
www.emedicinehealth.com/snoring/article_em.htm
www.kidshealth.org/kid/health_problems/teeth/snoring.html
www.answers.com/topic/snoring-3
CPAP & Mouth Breathing Problems:
http://www.sleepnet.com/apnea81/messages/460.html
http://www.cpaptalk.com/viewtopic.php?t=10738
http://www.apneanet.org/lovecpap.htm
http://www.chinupstrip.com/CPAP_Chin-Up.htm (we think the SnorEnder is a better, more cost effective solution)
http://www.chestjournal.org/cgi/content/full/126/4/1248
http://www.talkaboutsleep.com/sleep-disorders/archives/Snoring_apnea_mouthleak.htm
Cooperative Informational Links:
http://www.faant.com/ - Grapevine Podiatrist, Podiatry, Foot Pain, Colleyville, Southlake, Texas Our physicians are all extensively trained and offer your family state-of-the-art technology and training coupled with good old-fashioned common sense and compassion.
People Who Think We're Nuts (for your enjoyment)
http://www.newsweek.com/id/124446/page/1 (The Six Wackiest Snoring 'Fixes') -
See our response on the home page. This article was pretty bad; sadly, it shows far more about what the state of "journalism" has fallen to that it does about snoring relief. Meanwhile, we got a lot of great and free publicity...thanks guys!
Web page last modified: 09/03/2008
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