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Snoring is associated with poor school performance

Parents have been worried about their children’s performance in school for as long as children started going to school. And many factors can contribute to poor performance in school. However, it appears that there is a new culprit in town – or at least a newly discovered one: snoring.

But let’s take one step back. In 1964 an American secondary school student Randy Gardner broke the world record by staying without sleep for 11 days and 27 minutes. During that time, he suffered from memory glitches, mood problems and hallucinations.

However, as we learned from Mathew Walker’s book “Why We Sleep,” you don’t have to stay awake for days before suffering from the wrath of sleep deprivation. It is bad for cardiovascular, reproductive and immune health – and more relevant to our topic of today – cognition and learning.

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Further, Dr. Mathew Walker and a colleague published a paper in 2019 titled “sleep loss causes social withdrawal and loneliness. Which means lack of sleep has social implications too as you become suspicious of people and become less comfortable when they stand close to you because the ability to understand their intentions become impaired.

Another instructive insight from Dr. Walker’s publications is that you cannot recover sleep. For instance, you can’t make up for three nights of sleeping poorly by sleeping for 13 hours on the fourth day.

Therefore, if you cannot recover sleep, then sleep quality must be very important for our children, even if they are getting the required eight hours of sleep per night.

Snoring has been fingered as one of the culprits that steal from quality sleep.

A study in 2003 by Michael S. Urschitz et al grouped 1,144 primary school children into either always, frequently, occasionally and never snoring.

They found that snoring always was significantly correlated with poor academic performance in math, science and spelling; and “snoring frequently” was associated with poor academic performance in mathematics and spelling.

A similar study from 2001 by Gozal and Pope found that early childhood snoring was associated with poor academic performance in middle school (ages 13 to 14).

Another study from 1994 titled “Natural history of snoring and related behaviour problems between the ages of 4 and 7 years” showed that “daytime sleepiness, hyperactivity, and restless sleep were all significantly more common in the habitual snorers than in those who never snored.

Yet another paper in 2005 by Ronald D. Chervin and colleagues noted that “snoring predicts hyperactivity four years later.”

Other studies showed that snoring was correlated with headache, high blood pressure, secretion of less growth hormone, heart attack and stroke.

What causes snoring and how can one minimize it?  What happens during snoring is that airflow is partially blocked by tissues in the airway. Snoring is a measure of sleep quality because if you don’t breathe well, you don’t sleep well.

Snoring can be managed by the posture you take while sleeping. Should you sleep on your back, stomach or sides.

Charles Nunn said that one of the common features of the great apes and humans is that we make beds for sleeping in. When I checked pictures of sleeping apes, I found most of them sleeping on their sides.

A 2015 study showed that orangutans have deeper, more efficient sleep than baboons because the orangutans spent three times more sleeping on their sides than on their backs.

In humans too, “sleeping on your stomach is not good for the neck because the neck has to be turned 45 degrees as well as putting excessive stress on the lower back” Dr. Alan Mandell said.

And which is the best side to sleep on, left or right?

“Studies have shown that sleeping on your right-hand side, is good for your heart. Unless you’re pregnant, in which case try to fall sleep on your left. Either way, avoid sleeping on your front or back,” says Richard Wiseman in his book, “Night School.”

Also, “…sleeping on the left side can put a strain on internal organs like the liver, lungs, and stomach…”medicaldaily.com.

And 1400 years ago, Prophet Muhammad (SAW): “When you go to bed, do wudoo ’ [ablution] as if for prayer, then lie down on your right side…” (Narrated by al-Bukhaari, al-Wudoo’, 239).

Therefore, teach your children to lie on their sides, preferably on the right side to minimize snoring and reduce the risk of poor performance.

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