Socks usually worn to prevent blood clots during long-haul flights could also banish snoring, according to new research.
The flight socks are thought to reduce the amount of fluid that builds up in the lower part of the legs during the day.
Some studies have found that at night some of this fluid 'shifts' up to the neck area as a result of gravity when the patient is lying down. This can lead to obstructive sleep apnoea, a snoring–related condition that affects an estimated three million people in Britain.
[...]
Flight socks - essentially cut-down versions of the compression stockings widely used on the NHS to treat varicose veins - could help some patients, according to the latest research from the University of Toronto in Canada.
These work by squeezing the lower leg to keep blood moving and stop the build-up of fluid.
The Toronto study recruited more than 50 men with sleep apnoea. Half wore compressions socks every day for two weeks, taking them off for bed; the rest wore ordinary socks.
At night, each patient was connected to a monitor to track their snoring while electrodes on the leg and neck area assessed the shift in fluid when they were lying down.
The results, published in the journal Sleep Medicine, showed that men who'd worn socks had less fluid moving to their neck and a reduction in the number of times their sleep was disrupted, from an average of more than 30 times an hour to around 15.
Men who wore ordinary socks saw virtually no change.
Dr Simon Merritt, a consultant in respiratory and sleep medicine at the Conquest Hospital in Hastings, said: 'This isn't going to be a treatment in its own right, but it could become an adjunct to the conventional treatment.'
News Story: Flight socks might help with snoring
News Story: Flight socks might help with snoring
From: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/artic ... -neck.html
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Re: News Story: Flight socks might help with snoring
My husband is supposed to wear compression stockings, but can't get them on, wonder if these would be helpful - anybody ever have experience with them? Couldn't find out the difference between them and compression stockings.
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Re: News Story: Flight socks might help with snoring
I wear the diabetic 15-20 compression knee high type, I get them from Dr. Comfort on line. My Cardiologist wants me to wear the 15-20 compression socks. I put them on as soon as I get out of bed and take them off when I go to bed. This is the sock that I wear https://www.drcomfort.com/our-footwear/ ... rt--15-20-
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