Snoring and Sleep Apnea

in Roswell & Alpharetta, GA

<h2>Better Sleep Begins With the Right Diagnosis</h2>

<p>Loud snoring, gasping, witnessed breathing pauses, and persistent daytime sleepiness can be more than a nighttime nuisance. They may signal obstructive sleep apnea, a condition in which the upper airway repeatedly narrows or closes during sleep.</p>

<p>Northbridge Dental helps adults in Alpharetta, Roswell, and nearby communities identify warning signs, connect with an appropriate medical provider for diagnosis, and receive custom oral-appliance therapy when it has been medically prescribed.</p>

<p><strong>Screening and referral · Physician-directed diagnosis · Custom oral appliances and follow-up</strong></p>

Request a Sleep-Breathing Consultation

<h3>Recognize the Warning Signs</h3>

<p>Snoring, choking, breathing pauses, morning headaches, dry mouth, and daytime sleepiness deserve appropriate evaluation.</p>

<h3>Coordinate Medical Diagnosis</h3>

<p>A licensed medical provider determines whether sleep testing is appropriate and establishes the diagnosis and severity.</p>

<h3>Provide Dental Therapy</h3>

<p>When prescribed, a custom titratable oral appliance can be fitted, adjusted, monitored, and coordinated with medical follow-up.</p>

<h2>Snoring Is a Symptom, Not a Diagnosis</h2>

<p>Snoring occurs when airflow makes relaxed tissues vibrate during sleep. It can occur without obstructive sleep apnea, but it is also a common warning sign of OSA. The sound or loudness of snoring cannot determine whether apnea is present or how severe it may be.</p>

<p>Obstructive sleep apnea involves repeated upper-airway blockage during sleep. Central sleep apnea is different: breathing interruptions result from problems with the signals that control breathing. An oral appliance used for obstructive sleep apnea does not treat central sleep apnea.</p>

<p>Because primary snoring and OSA require different management, diagnosis should come from an appropriately licensed medical provider rather than from symptoms, an app, a dental examination, or an automatically scored test alone.</p>

<h2>Signs That Deserve a Sleep Evaluation</h2>

<ul>
<li>Frequent loud snoring</li>
<li>Witnessed breathing pauses during sleep</li>
<li>Waking while choking, snorting, or gasping</li>
<li>Excessive daytime sleepiness or fatigue</li>
<li>Morning headaches or dry mouth</li>
<li>Difficulty concentrating, remembering, or reacting</li>
<li>Frequent nighttime urination</li>
<li>Unrefreshing sleep despite enough time in bed</li>
</ul>

<p>Untreated sleep apnea is associated with serious health and safety concerns, including cardiovascular problems and impaired daytime alertness. If you are dangerously sleepy, avoid driving or operating machinery and contact a medical provider promptly.</p>

<h2>How Oral-Appliance Therapy Fits Into Care</h2>

<p>Oral-appliance therapy uses a custom device worn during sleep to hold the lower jaw in a position intended to help maintain an open upper airway. It may be prescribed for an adult with obstructive sleep apnea who prefers it to CPAP or cannot tolerate CPAP, and it may be prescribed for primary snoring after OSA has been ruled out.</p>

<p><strong>01 · SCREEN AND REFER</strong></p>

<h3>Recognizing Possible Sleep-Disordered Breathing</h3>

<p>We review symptoms and examine the teeth, gums, jaw, bite, and oral structures relevant to appliance therapy. Screening does not diagnose sleep apnea, so suspected cases are referred for medical evaluation.</p>

<p><strong>02 · DIAGNOSE AND PRESCRIBE</strong></p>

<h3>Medical Evaluation and Sleep Testing</h3>

<p>A medical provider determines the appropriate diagnostic pathway, which may include an in-laboratory sleep study or properly ordered home sleep apnea test. If oral-appliance therapy is suitable, the medical provider supplies the diagnosis and prescription.</p>

<p><strong>03 · FIT AND MONITOR</strong></p>

<h3>Custom Appliance and Follow-Up</h3>

<p>We make a custom titratable appliance, verify its fit, and adjust it gradually. Dental follow-up monitors comfort, adherence, teeth, gums, jaw joints, and bite. The medical provider may order follow-up sleep testing to verify effectiveness.</p>

<h2>Oral Appliance, CPAP, or Another Treatment?</h2>

<p>Positive airway pressure, including CPAP, is a common and highly effective medical treatment that keeps the airway open with pressurized air. It generally improves breathing-event measures and oxygen levels more than oral appliances, but the right therapy also depends on diagnosis, severity, health, anatomy, preferences, and the ability to use treatment consistently.</p>

<p>Other care may include weight management, positional therapy, treatment of nasal obstruction, selected medications, surgery, or other physician-directed approaches. Lifestyle changes can support treatment but should not replace prescribed therapy or follow-up testing.</p>

<p>Do not stop CPAP or change prescribed sleep-apnea therapy without speaking with the medical provider managing your condition.</p>

<h2>Possible Oral-Appliance Side Effects</h2>

<p>Many people adapt successfully, but oral appliances require ongoing dental supervision. Temporary or lasting effects can include jaw or tooth discomfort, dry mouth, increased saliva, gum irritation, morning bite changes, tooth movement, or changes in how the upper and lower teeth fit together.</p>

<p>Contact us if the appliance causes pain, damages a tooth or restoration, no longer fits, or produces a persistent bite change. Continue regular dental care and the follow-up schedule recommended by both your dentist and medical sleep provider.</p>

<h2>Snoring and Sleep Apnea FAQs</h2>

Can a dentist diagnose sleep apnea?

No. A dentist can screen for signs and risk indicators, evaluate dental suitability for an oral appliance, and coordinate care. Obstructive sleep apnea and primary snoring must be diagnosed by an appropriately licensed medical provider using the clinical information and testing required for the case.

Does everyone who snores have sleep apnea?

No. Snoring can occur without sleep apnea, but it is also a common symptom of OSA. Loudness alone cannot distinguish primary snoring from sleep apnea. Medical evaluation is important before treating snoring with an oral appliance.

Who may be considered for an oral appliance?

A medical provider may prescribe a custom oral appliance for an adult with obstructive sleep apnea who cannot tolerate CPAP or prefers an alternative, or for medically diagnosed primary snoring. Dental health, jaw function, available teeth, restorations, and other factors also affect candidacy.

Is an over-the-counter anti-snoring device the same as a custom appliance?

No. A custom titratable appliance is made for your teeth and bite, adjusted gradually, and monitored by a dentist working with the medical provider. Self-directed devices may fit poorly, cause side effects, or reduce snoring while leaving sleep apnea inadequately treated.

How do we know whether the oral appliance is working?

Feeling better or snoring less is encouraging but does not prove that breathing events and oxygen levels are adequately controlled. The medical provider may order follow-up sleep testing with the appliance in place, while dental visits monitor fit, comfort, adherence, and oral side effects.

Does insurance cover oral-appliance therapy?

Coverage varies and may be processed through medical rather than dental insurance. Plans may require a medical diagnosis, sleep-study report, prescription, documentation of CPAP intolerance or preference, and a qualified provider. Our team can help identify the records commonly requested.

<h2>Take the Next Step Toward Safer, More Restful Sleep</h2>

<p>If you snore frequently, wake gasping, have witnessed breathing pauses, or struggle with daytime sleepiness, begin with appropriate evaluation. Northbridge Dental can help screen, coordinate referral, and determine dental suitability for prescribed oral-appliance therapy.</p>

<p><strong>Alpharetta:</strong> 10955 Jones Bridge Road, Suite 129<br><strong>Roswell:</strong> 990 Holcomb Bridge Road, Suite 3</p>

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