A Talk With Tony Soileau And How Jaw Position And Nasal Breathing Protect Your Sleep
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概要
Snoring isn’t just a sound problem, it can be a nightly oxygen problem that steals your deep sleep while you swear you “slept all night.” We sit down with Dr. Tony Soileau, clinical director and owner of Smiles by Soileau and Lafayette Sleep Solutions, to connect the dots between the jaw, tongue, airway, and the fatigue that follows you into every morning. If you or your partner sleeps in a different room because of snoring, this conversation puts real physiology behind a very common story.
We talk dental sleep medicine and why a dentist can be a key part of sleep apnea treatment, while still relying on a proper sleep study for diagnosis. Dr. Soileau explains what actually happens when you lie down and gravity pulls the jaw back, how “light snoring” can progress into true obstructive sleep apnea events, and why the goal is not just more time in bed but better sleep stages. You’ll also hear what a modern home sleep study looks like, plus how CPAP works compared to a custom oral appliance that holds the jaw in a safer breathing position.
Then we zoom out to the bigger health picture: nasal breathing, nitric oxide, box breathing, vagus nerve regulation, and why stage three sleep matters for healing, hormone balance, inflammation, and the brain’s glymphatic cleanup. We also cover insomnia patterns and the simple 20 to 30-minute rule to rebuild a healthier association with bed, along with clear guidance on melatonin and magnesium so they’re not used like sedatives.
If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with someone who snores, and leave a review so more people can find better sleep. What’s the one sleep habit you want to change first?