Depending on the nature of your Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB), treatment may include a medicine designed to enhance your upper airway muscular activity during sleep.
Recent evidence supports the use of a range of medications that affect the neurochemical control of upper airway muscle tone during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and non-REM sleep. These medications are often employed together with other non-medical treatments for SDB.
Sleep hygiene is important behavior you can practice to promote better sleep. While all of the other treatments will help your specific symptoms and diagnosis if you combine that with an excellent sleep hygiene routine, you will be more likely to achieve optimal results.
“Sleep hygiene are important behaviors you can practice to promote better sleep.”
Avoid naps if possible.
Don’t stay in bed awake for more than 5-10 minutes.

Don’t watch TV or read in bed.
Do not drink caffeine inappropriately
Avoid inappropriate substances that interfere with sleep
Exercise regularly
Have a quiet, comfortable bedroom
If you are a ‘clock watcher’ at night, hide the clock.
Have a comfortable pre-bedtime routine
Surgical procedures on upper airway soft tissue structures often eliminate Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB) in children (tonsils and adenoids). Recent meta-analyses of the literature conclude that surgical removal of the uvula and associated soft tissue structures in adults provides benefit in snoring for up to 50% of patients, but is not considered an effective therapy for Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA).
“Surgical procedures on upper airway soft tissue structures often eliminate Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB) in children (tonsils and adenoids).”
For patients with specific, boney facial and jaw deficits (such as a short jaw), there are also effective surgical therapies.
In many cases, sleeping on your back increases Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB). Using a combination of soft wedges, sleepwear, and head positioning, supine SDB can be effectively managed in many patients. Most people consider weight gain as the cause of SDB. Actually, weight gain can increase the pressures placed on the airway which may increase the severity of SDB.
“In many cases, sleeping on your back increases Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB).”
Weight loss is an effective strategy to reduce SDB and is often employed with other more immediate therapies such as PAP or Oral Appliance Therapy.
These methods teach patients how to change actions or thoughts that impede the natural sleep process. Patients learn how to regain control of their sleep by developing sleep-promoting behaviors and thoughts.