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VIDEO: This Is What Can Happen If You Sleep with Pets. They Thought It Was Just a Blackhead

No one enjoys having zits and blackheads and absolutely anything in this category. There are those who let them be and those that start trying to pop them and get them out of their body. There really is nothing good about them anyway you put them.

Anyone can write on Evonews. Start writing!

Aside from acne that you get as a teenager, all the other kinds might have a lot of reasons for appearing because adults that are healthy don’t usually get them.

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Some people think that one of the main reasons why we get them is because we sleep with out pets. Animal lovers will almost never agree that this is true, but there are pros and cons to sleeping with pets, just as there are for just about anything.

According to usareturn.com, every now and again this debate rears its canine head, and we’ve seen it floating around our blogosphere travels lately.

The danger of sleeping with dogs in our household are but one: That we wake up chilly at 3 am because Dexter has all the covers. Let sleeping dogs lie, so the saying goes, as many dog moms and dads attest that the best night’s sleep is produced when a dog is lying by their side, pillow to pillow, tail to tush, snout to sheet.

According to a survey conducted by the American Pet Products Association, almost half of dogs sleep with their owners in their owner’s beds. Dogs are creatures of habit, so if a dog enjoys roaming into his kennel at night, why not allow him the comfort and “den-like” ritual of hunkering down into his favorite nighttime spot.

Sleeping with your feline friend isn’t unusual in the United States. According to a recent survey of pet owners by the American Pet Products Association, 62 percent of cats sleep with their adult owners, and another 13 percent of cats sleep with children.

Cats are wonderfully therapeutic; they can help calm nerves, lower blood pressure, and reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke.

Here are five really good reasons to never share your covers with your kitty.

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A study released by the Mayo Clinic Sleep Disorders Center found that 10 percent of sleep-deprived pet owners said the disturbances in their sleep come from letting their pets share the bed. And snoring isn’t just a people problem. The study also found that 21 percent of sleep clinic patients had snoring dogs and seven percent had snoring cats.

The problem is that cats are nocturnal, mostly because they spend much of the time sleeping all day. Humans, however, are not. Enough said.

Over eight percent of adults, along with nine percent of children, suffer from asthma; if you’re one of those people, bringing a cat into the bedroom will only make you suffer more.

Emerging Infectious Diseases, in conjunction with the CDC, released an article called “Zoonoses in the Bedroom.”

Approximately 60 percent of all human pathogens could have been transmitted by an animal: rabies, ringworm, hookworms, toxoplasmosis, roundworm, giardia, even bubonic plague.

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