Snoring Common Among Young Women With Allergies

Main Category: Allergy
Article Date: 04 Nov 2005 - 11:00 PDT

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Young women with atopy (allergies to pollen, food, dander venoms, etc) are more likely to snore, according to researchers from the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (Cincinnati, OH) and the University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati, OH).

After completing a questionnaire about snoring frequency and smoking status and having a skin prick test to determine allergies to 15 aeroallergens, 515 women, with an average age of 29.8 years, were compared to identify snoring risk factors.

Results show that 257 (49.9 percent) never snored, 176 (34.2 percent) snored at least 1 night a week, and 105 (20.4 percent) snored at least three times per week.

Patients in this group who smoked were almost twice as likely to snore regularly (34.0 percent vs 18.2 percent), and African-Americans were also more likely to smoke (29.1 percent vs 18.5 percent).

CHEST 2005 abstract highlights

Jennifer Stawarz
jstawarz@chestnet.org
American College of Chest Physicians
chestnet.org

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Kieth Hadsmith. "Snoring Common Among Young Women With Allergies." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 4 Nov. 2005. Web.
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Kieth Hadsmith. (2005, November 4). "Snoring Common Among Young Women With Allergies." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
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