Sleeping with your mouth open may not seem like a big deal, but it’s a major red flag that you’re not breathing properly at night, which can have a severe negative impact on your overall health and wellness.
Symptoms of Nighttime Mouth Breathing
Sleeping with your mouth open isn’t normal — it’s a sign that you’re not breathing properly when you sleep and can be a symptom of more severe health problems. Mouth breathing is also terrible for your oral health.
The symptoms of nighttime mouth breathing are slightly different in kids and adults because children’s anatomy and physiology are unique.
The main symptoms of nighttime mouth breathing in adults are:
- Dry mouth
- Sore throat
- Poor oral health (gum disease and tooth decay)
- Bad breath (halitosis)
- Snoring, particularly if you snore loudly enough to wake your bed partner
- Morning headaches
- Daytime sleepiness from sleep deprivation
- Brain fog and difficulty concentrating
Patients who sleep with their mouths open often wake up in the morning feeling exhausted even though they think they had a good night’s sleep. Mouth breathing and the anatomical changes that cause it drastically reduce sleep quality, impacting overall quality of life.
Children who sleep with their mouth open commonly experience:
- Trouble concentrating
- ADHD-like symptoms
- Slower-than-normal growth
- Difficulty controlling emotions
- Excessive tiredness
- Oral health problems, including dry mouth and tooth decay
Mouth breathing is often misdiagnosed as ADHD, so if a child has any of the common symptoms of ADHD or has even been diagnosed with the disorder, parents should talk to the child’s dentist to determine if open mouth breathing at night is the real culprit.