Agyness Deyn ‘snores like a freight train’, reveals best pal

London, Mar 20 (ANI): Spilling the beans on their 13-year friendship, Agyness Deyn’s best friend Henry Holland has revealed that he had even shared bed with the hot supermodel, who actually snores like a freight train.

Fashion designer Holland has been close with Agy – then a mousy-haired schoolgirl called Laura Hollins – since they were 13 years old and she served him a fish supper at the chippie where she worked after school in their native Ramsbottom in Lancashire.

In an exclusive interview with the Mirror, Henry, who now lives in North London with his boyfriend, revealed that he used to share his flat with the Manhattan based catwalk queen.

“Agy and me used to go in the chip shop every Friday she worked there and we used to take the p*** out of the woman in the tabard,” the Mirror quoted Henry as saying.

“I lived with Agyness for three years as she started out modelling and it was hard work, really hard for her.

“We both supported each other and when I was working in magazines she thought it was amazing. And when I got promoted to fashion assistant she was there supporting me,” he added.

And the final member of the Ramsbottom Three is their other close friend Jessica Fletcher, another schoolmate who now works as head of sales for his House of Holland and H! ranges.

“We all got together years ago, we were three best friends. I came first because I came to study here then Agyness came to do some modelling part time as she had some work down here.

“She would come and stay with me in my halls of residence and she would sleep in my single bed which was very frustrating because, she snores!” he said.

“We later got a two-bedroom place together – me, Jessica and Agyness. There were two beds and we worked on a rotation system. They both had boyfriends so it was very frustrating as I was constantly on the couch!” he added.

However, the trio has temporarily broken up as Agyness has moved to New York where her star has risen further.

“But she yearns for her down-to-earth mates from the small mill town to join her in the Big Apple. She”s not coming back,” he said. (ANI)

Sound recordings can help detect obstructive sleep apnoea

Melbourne, Sept 11 (ANI): Australian scientists have come up with a non-invasive screening tool for detecting obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA).

Snoring is a very early symptom of sleep apnoea, however, monitoring the changes in pitch, frequency and other characteristics of the snores can help detect OSA.

Biomedical engineer and co-researcher Dr Udantha Abeyratne, of the University of Queensland have developed a non-contact method of screening patients suspected of OSA, which could eventually be used at home.

Abeyratne says the device records the sounds of a person’s snoring, which “is a very early symptom of sleep apnea.”

Currently, the only way to diagnose a person with OSA is to have them spend a night at a sleep centre or hospital, hooked up to a machine that monitors their sleep continuously.

“There are very long waiting lists to come into the hospital and get tested,” ABC Online quoted Abeyratne as saying.

He said compared to the traditional method of diagnosing OSA, the sound recordings method is 90pct accurate.

Abeyratne hopes the technology will be available for use in people’s homes in the next three to five years. (ANI)

Sleeping with partner could be bad for health and relationship

London, Sept 9 (ANI): The secret to a long, healthy and happy marriage might lie in having separate beds, claims a sleep expert.

A research has found that sharing a bed often led to poor quality sleep as people were regularly disturbed by their loved ones during the night.

Speaking at a special seminar on sleep at the British Science Festival, Dr Neil Stanley, a sleep expert at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, said: “A normal double bed is 4ft 6inches wide. That means you have up to nine inches less per person in a double bed than a child has in a single bed.

“Add to this another person who kicks, punches, snores and gets up to go to the loo and is it any wonder that we are not getting a good night’s sleep?

“To save your marriage and your health you should have a discussion about your sleep.”

However, despite the detrimental effects of snoring, teeth grinding and tossing and turning, people tolerated it because culturally sleeping together is considered a sign of intimacy, reports The Telegraph.

Stanley, who follows his own advice and sleeps in a different room to his wife, said that double beds are just not conducive to a good night’s sleep.

He said the tradition of the marital bed began with the industrial revolution, when people moved into cities and found themselves short of living space. Before the Victorian era it was not uncommon for married couples to sleep apart.

“Intimacy is good for emotional health but good sleep is good for physical and mental health,” he said.

Stanley, who set up the Sleep Lab at the University of Surrey, said: “Sleep is a selfish thing to do. No one can share your sleep. If you know that your partner is next to you, then you are awake. If you are sleeping together and it is all right then carry on. If not then you should do something about it, not just tolerate it. Getting a good night’s sleep is as important as diet and exercise.”

The expert also suggested various ways through which couples could improve their sleep, if sleeping in separate beds was too much of a leap.

They included buying a bigger bed, having separate duvets and having darker curtains. (ANI)