Journal of Dental Sciences (Jan 2022)

Effects of a novel oral appliance on snoring in adults: A pilot study

  • Hsueh-Hsin Kao,
  • Yen-Chang Lin,
  • Jui-Kun Chiang,
  • Madan Ho,
  • Hsiao-Chen Yu,
  • Chia-Yuan Hsu,
  • Chih-Ming Lu,
  • Yee-Hsin Kao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 521 – 527

Abstract

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AbstractBackground/purpose: Oral appliances (OAs) have been recommended as alternatives for adult patients with obstructive sleep apnea who are intolerant of continuous positive airway pressure therapy. The aim of this study was to explore the effect on snoring rates among adult patients through use of a novel OA termed the Lin OA (LOA, airflow-interference-type nasal congestion relieving and snore-ceasing oral appliance). Materials and methods: The LOA consist of two parts: dental braces and a fixed tongue compressor. The compressor lengths range from 0.5 cm to 3.5 cm across versions. Patients used the LOA during sleep and the SnoreClock smartphone application recorded their snoring rates. Results: A total of 4920 recordings (4239 recordings from 34 men, 681 recordings from 8 women) were used for the analysis. The recordings were sorted in accordance with the applied length of the LOA tongue compressor (0.5–3.5 cm, LOA-0.5, LOA-1 and LOA-3.5), and participants not using the LOA were denoted as the LOA-0 group. The women had higher snoring rates in the LOA-0, LOA-0.5 to LOA-2 groups, but lower snoring rates in the LOA-3 group than men by the univariate analysis. The snoring rates were significantly reduced by a mean of 5.04% with every 1 cm increase in tongue compressor length. Continuous LOA use resulted in snoring rate reductions of 0.02% per day by the random intercept model of the linear regression. Conclusion: Use of this novel LOA may significantly reduce snoring rates by 5.04% with each 1 cm increase in tongue compressor length.

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