Home
FAQs
Who Needs AcuSleep?
Products
. The AcuSleep Test
. Advantages
. Sample Report
. Cautions
. Gallery
. . Body Positions
. . Movements
. . Sound
. Future Products
Buy
Snoring Facts
Company
Site Map
|
![Next Page](imj/arrowr_big.gif)
Gallery of Sound
This page contains sound information recorded by the AcuSleep system.
Below, you can listen to sounds by clicking on a sound diagram
or loudspeaker icon.
We strongly recommend listening with headphones.
You need Quicktime to hear the sounds on this page.
You also need patience -- for downloading the sound files (about 1.5 megabytes).
Normal Breathing
The sound diagram below shows one minute of normal breathing in a 4-year-old girl.
In all sound diagrams, time runs across the diagram from left to right, in minutes.
This diagrams starts at the 52nd minute of the AcuSleep test.
The peaks and valleys show the sound level at every instant. The higher the peak, the louder the sound.
Each peak in this diagram represents a phase of breathing: first an inhale, then an exhale.
There is generally a pause between breaths.
All this will be clearer if you listen to the sound.
Classic Snoring
Here is a sample of classic "sawing wood" snoring:
The red coloring indicates snoring.
The diagram does not show the full shape of the breathing, as the sound level is capped at 200 units.
Snoring can come and go during the night. Here again is the 4-year-old girl
whose normal breathing was shown earlier:
This girl's large tonsils are the most likely cause of her snoring.
Expiratory Snoring
Snoring usually occurs when inhaling. This one-minutes recording shows
snoring may also occur when exhaling:
Later, this same subject snored during
both the inhale and exhale phases of breathing. Listen carefully for the inhale snoring.
This subject generally does not snore.
However, before this particular AcuSleep study, the subject had slept less than 2 of the previous 52 hours.
Fatigue or exhaustion can worsen or bring out snoring.
Interrupted Breathing Sounds
This sample is from the busy physician described on an
earlier page.
Your eyes and ears will tell you what is happening.
The time difference between the "121.1" and the "121.6" marks is 0.5 minutes, which is 30 seconds.
An Unknown
Try your hand (and ear) at figuring out what happens in this recording snippet.
|