Your health professional will record your medical history to
determine whether your
snoring is simply interfering with your or your
partner's sleep or whether you have
sleep apnea, a potentially serious sleep
disorder.
Your health professional will ask if you:
- Have symptoms, such as fatigue and excessive
daytime sleepiness, loud and consistent snoring, morning headache, and weight
gain.
- Have a dry mouth in the morning.
- Have problems
with concentration or memory.
- Have lung or heart
diseases.
- Drink alcohol, especially before bedtime.
Often people with snoring or sleep apnea are not aware that they
snore or stop breathing or have other symptoms during sleep. Your health
professional will ask your sleeping partner about your behavior during sleep
such as restlessness, grunting, gasping, and times when breathing stops. Your
health professional may also ask about your snoring: how loudly and how
frequently you snore, and whether you snore more when sleeping on your back or
on your side.
If you sleep alone, your health professional may ask you to record a
night's sleep using a sound-activated tape recorder. Your health professional
also may ask you to keep track of such information as when you fall asleep, how
many times you wake up during the night and for how long, how much sleep you
get, and how many naps you take during the day. You can do this using a
sleep
diary
(What is a PDF document?).
Children
When evaluating your child for snoring or sleep apnea, your health
professional will ask about any:
- History of restless sleep or frequent waking
during the night.
- Tonsil or adenoid
problems.
- History of bed-wetting.
- History of
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). A
child may be suspected of having ADHD when he or she instead has sleep
apnea.
- History of nervous system (neurological), lung, or heart
conditions present from birth.