Archive for February, 2009

snoring evolution
An explanation of changes for snoring?

You might think snoring in the middle of a forest, surrounded by animals carnivores, would be inappropriate from an evolutionary point of view. Is it possible she could have adaptive bin? Or simply unusual snoring during the early stages of our evolution, because everybody was lean, mean and not suffering from something like apnea? Or at least, does not suffer from something like that long?

Evolution is not a compelling force. Things did not adapt conditions. It's just that those who do survive better and their features are transmitted more. Some agencies make changes worse than they were. If it is still good enough to survive it survives. Otherwise, it does not. Evolution is not a cause. It is a result. That People very soon snoring, I do not know. Maybe we should listen to the enclosure of great apes in zoos at night, or better still go and listen to Africa some in the wild. Much more exciting. Sleep apnea is a cessation of breathing during sleep and not necessarily linked to snoring although the reduction of air passages with age may be associated with both. You do not want to suffer from apnea too long … you'd be dead. Very few communities of wild animals sleep in exposed or hazardous circumstances and not in tunnels or nests high eg in fact all members of the group slept at once. Assume responsibility for guard duties is very common and I doubt that the early hominids would have forgotten it on their way up the ladder of evolution. http://www.helpguide.org/life/snoring.htm. . . Snoring is not confined to overweight people. American Indians had a number of remedies and techniques to stop themselves snoring and betray their presence when they were on hunting trips involving overnght in the desert, and I can not imagine any of them were overweight or unfit. Snoring ocurre when the airflow from the rear oral cavity is happening in a manner that the soft palate to vibrate like a reed in an oboe vibrates. It requires a resonance. Some people air passages narrow enough, a soft palate just enough flexibility, and breathing rates only far enough to establish this resonance during their sleep. Other people with the same air passages size and rate of breathing, but a size or thickness or swelling of the soft palate does not snore. All factors must be right but there is a fairly wide range in which it works. It's not just overweight or unfit. my son in law snore at times. It is a fisherman on the Irish Sea, with its own boat. In all times and tough as old boots. And he plays for a team of local football and trains three times a week. But sometimes even snoring. It's just the way it was built and how it breathes during he sleeps. It's the same with soldiers. Fit, strong guy who does not actually want to snore when there is a chance to hear enemy soldiers. Not the best thing to do for covert operations in dangerous territory. I used to get the night, some occupied. LARF Gorra, but he is really serious Physicians things become necessary. All part of the fun …. Some people can whistle between his teeth. Others may not, however, they vary the breath or the contortions of the lips and tongue. The conditions are simply not happen in the degree of breath control that they can muster. To produce a snoring diliberately is easy for some but difficult for others, whatever the state of fitness they have. The palate vibrates just a little easier for some people than others, depending on their own air passages and breathing associated with characteristics of their soft palate. We'd better not put on the tooth grinding ….. ooh, the racket some people do with that! She woke up one snorer in shells.

Your Inner Fish


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