Snoring and Sleep Concerns in Children
Occasional snoring in a child is often harmless, but frequent, loud snoring can be a sign of sleep-disordered breathing that affects sleep, growth, and daytime behavior. At San Marcos Kids Dentistry, we screen for the signs, explain what we observe, and coordinate referrals. We do not diagnose or treat sleep apnea, which is managed by a physician.
Snoring, mouth breathing, and restless sleep can be more than ordinary kid sleep. As a board-certified pediatric dentist in San Marcos, CA, Dr. Nikki Shafiei helps parents recognize the early signs of airway-related sleep concerns, including the patterns that can point toward pediatric sleep-disordered breathing, so children can rest better and feel their best during the day. It is important to be clear about our role. We screen and identify, and we coordinate with your child’s physician and specialists. A formal diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea is a medical decision made by a doctor, often with a sleep study. What we offer is an informed first look from the dental side, and a clear path to the right next step.
Is Snoring Normal in Children?
Some snoring is common in childhood, and an occasional snore during a cold or allergy flare is usually nothing to worry about. The concern is a lasting pattern. When snoring happens most nights, is loud, or comes with pauses, gasping, or restless sleep, it can be a sign that your child is not breathing easily at night. That is worth a closer look. Noticing it early is not about alarm, it is about giving your child the best chance at healthy sleep and growth.
Signs of Sleep-Disordered Breathing in Children
Sleep concerns can be easy to miss, because many children do not simply look tired. It helps to watch for both nighttime and daytime signs.
At night:
- Frequent or loud snoring, or noisy breathing
- Pauses in breathing, gasping, or choking sounds
- Chronic mouth breathing during sleep
- Restless sleep, tossing and turning, or unusual positions with the head tilted back
- Teeth grinding
- Bedwetting beyond the expected age
During the day:
- Trouble waking, or waking up tired and irritable
- Difficulty focusing, or attention and behavior changes
- Morning headaches
- Daytime sleepiness, or the opposite, hyperactivity
A single sign on its own is rarely a problem. A cluster of them, night after night, is the signal to seek an evaluation.
The Hidden Link Between Sleep and Behavior
Here is something many parents do not expect. In children, poor sleep from a breathing concern often does not look like sleepiness, it looks like hyperactivity, distractibility, and trouble focusing. Because of this, sleep-disordered breathing can contribute to ADHD-like symptoms, and some children are evaluated for attention concerns when disrupted sleep is part of the picture. This does not mean snoring causes ADHD. It means that when a child is not reaching deep, restorative sleep, daytime behavior and learning can suffer, and addressing the breathing side is worth considering as part of the whole story.
How Snoring Connects to the Mouth and Jaw
This is where a pediatric dentist’s perspective is genuinely useful. The shape and development of the mouth, jaws, and airway all influence how easily a child breathes at night. Chronic mouth breathing, a narrow upper jaw, crowded teeth, and low tongue posture can each reduce the space available for airflow, and they often travel together. By looking at how your child’s mouth and jaws are developing, we can spot structural patterns that contribute to noisy or restless sleep, and fold that into a complete picture alongside your child’s medical team. Learn more about our airway-focused approach.
What a Pediatric Dental Screening Involves
A screening visit is calm and informative. We talk through your child’s sleep habits and the patterns you have noticed at home, then look closely at craniofacial development, tooth position, and how the tongue and lips rest and function. We may use simple tools such as a pediatric sleep questionnaire and a careful structural exam to understand what is contributing to the concern. If the findings suggest a breathing problem, we explain what we see and help you connect with the right specialist, often an ENT, a sleep physician, or your pediatrician, for any medical evaluation or sleep study. Because Dr. Shafiei holds privileges at Rady Children’s Hospital, we are well connected within the North County care network.
An important reassurance for parents: an evaluation does not automatically mean treatment. It gives you information, clarity, and a plan. From there, you and your child’s care team decide what makes sense.
When Should You Seek an Evaluation?
If your child snores most nights, breathes through the mouth during sleep, or shows daytime signs like trouble focusing or unusual fatigue, it is reasonable to ask about it. Sleep-disordered breathing can be present at any age, and identifying it while a child is still growing tends to open up more options. The simplest first step is to mention your concerns at your child’s next checkup, or to schedule a dedicated visit.
Talk With a San Marcos Pediatric Dentist About Your Child’s Sleep
If snoring or restless sleep has you wondering, an evaluation brings answers and peace of mind. Call San Marcos Kids Dentistry at (760) 744-8600 or request an appointment online. Learn more about our airway-focused care, and find our hours and directions on our San Marcos office page.
What Are The Signs Of Snoring Or Sleep-Disordered Breathing In Kids?
Insufficient oxygen during sleep can lead to inadequate oxygen supply to your child’s brain. Irregular breathing serves as an indicator of potential airway obstruction, which may manifest in the following symptoms:
- Snoring
- Teeth grinding (bruxism)
- Heavy breathing
- Gasping/waking with a startle
- Holding of breath
- Mouth breathing
Even if your child appears to sleep through the night, the quality of their sleep may be compromised. Indicators of poor quality sleep in your child may include:
- Tossing and turning
- Waking in a tangle of blankets
- Sleeping in odd positions (head extended back, on their tummy with bottom-up)
- Difficulty falling asleep
- Difficulty staying asleep
- Bedwetting
Symptoms often associated with ADHD might actually indicate an underlying sleep issue. When children fail to reach their REM cycle, it can lead to impaired executive functioning skills, encompassing areas such as working memory, cognitive flexibility, and inhibitory control. The following are some symptoms associated with this:
- Hyperactivity or fidgeting
- Emotional or irritable behavior
- Easy distractibility
- Daytime sleepiness
- Difficulty focusing or hyper-focusing
- Challenges with learning
- Issues with organizational skills
How to diagnose it?
Pediatric sleep issues present a complex challenge that requires accurate diagnosis. Recognizing the signs is just one aspect of unraveling the puzzle. If Dr. Nikki Shafiei suspects abnormal breathing during sleep, she aims to identify the root cause and collaborates with your ENT specialist to delve into the underlying factors. This process entails a comprehensive understanding of your child’s sleep environment, craniofacial structure, and functionality. Dr. Nikki Shafiei may utilize the following diagnostic tools to gain a comprehensive understanding:
- Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire
- Imaging (cone beam computed tomography or CBCT)
- High-resolution pulse oximetry (HRPO)
- Orthodontic models
- Oral motor functional assessment
- Breathing assessment
If you notice one or more of these symptoms consistently, it may be worth scheduling an evaluation so we can help you understand what’s going on and what next steps may be appropriate.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is snoring normal in children?
Occasional snoring during a cold or allergies can be normal. Frequent or loud snoring, especially most nights or with pauses and gasping, should be evaluated.
Is Snoring Normal in Children?
Can a child have sleep apnea without snoring?
Yes. Some children with sleep-disordered breathing have pauses in breathing, gasping, or restless sleep without loud snoring, which is why the daytime signs matter too.
Can a Child Have Sleep Apnea Without Snoring?
Does an evaluation mean my child will need treatment?
No. An evaluation is about understanding what is happening. It provides information and guidance, and any next steps are decided with your child’s medical team.
How Can Poor Sleep Affect My Child During the Day?
What is the difference between mouth breathing and sleep apnea?
Mouth breathing is a breathing pattern that can signal airway restriction. Sleep apnea is a medical condition involving repeated interruptions in breathing during sleep, diagnosed by a physician. Mouth breathing can be one contributing piece of the picture.