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Snoring Indicate Stroke and Heart Disease  

When you include people who often slept with a snoring or snoring should be vigilant. Not impossible, that habit becomes a sign that you are suffering from a high-risk heart disease and stroke. Snoring or vibrating sound during sleep soundly indeed long been suspected of experts associated with health disorders. Now, the indication is strengthened by the results of a study in Hungary that have linked snoring habits of heart disease and stroke

Riet involving more than 12 thousand patients and published in the Journal Sleep concluded that heavy snorer has a significant trend of having a heart attack or stroke than those who did not snore. These findings further strengthen the theory by researchers earlier about hubungaan between snoring with cardiovascular disease. Snoring is actually symptoms that can be experienced at various stages of any age. But this habit of carrying more commonly found in approximately 40 percent of men dewas adan 24 percent of adult women.

Snoring sound is caused by obstruction of air flow through the channel located at the back of the mouth and nasal cavity. At the time of the muscles of the palate and uvula (part of the ceiling, which extends from the top to the base of the tongue) in a relaxed state, they can vibrate to produce sound when the snorer breathes.

For years, experts are always aware that there is a strong correlation between snoring with different types of vascular disease (CVD) such as heart disease or stroke.

Research conducted by Hungarian experts are giving evidence to reinforce this suspicion. In his research, the experts interviewed around 12 thousand people to gather data about the patient's snoring habits. Once analyzed, it was revealed that the 'heavy snorer' has a 34 percent greater tendency of having a heart attack and 67 percent greater risk of experiencing a stroke.

Researchers said the case accompanied by loud snoring with breathing that stops can be used to identify a person's risk of heart disease and stroke. Data show that patients who snore loudly are not exactly not at increased risk. The good news again, particularly for men, the propensity for snoring also decreased after they passed the age of 70 years.

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