Talk to your physician
Your treatment plan should be made with a clinician who can review your full sleep test results. If you don't have a sleep medicine doctor yet, your primary care physician can refer you.
How to find a sleep specialistEnter your AHI (Apnea-Hypopnea Index) from your sleep test report to see what it means and what your treatment options look like. Educational tool. Talk to your physician about your specific results.
AHI 25 falls in the Moderate OSA range per AASM scoring criteria.
Educational tool. Not medical advice. Severity tiers reflect criteria from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. This tool does not diagnose sleep apnea. Talk to your physician about your sleep test results and treatment options.
Per AASM 2019, both CPAP and oral appliance therapy (OAT) are first-line treatment options at this severity.
Optional. Adding details from your sleep test report tailors the recommendations below to your specific case.
An AHI of 15–29 events per hour places you in the moderate obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) range per AASM scoring criteria. This means you experience between 15 and 29 apneas or hypopneas per hour of sleep on average. That's clinically significant disruption, and warrants treatment in most cases.
Per the AASM 2019 update, both CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) and oral appliance therapy (OAT) are considered first-line treatment options at this severity for adult OSA, meaning your physician should discuss both with you, and your preference plays a meaningful role in the decision. CPAP is generally more effective at reducing AHI; OAT tends to have higher long-term adherence rates because it's smaller, quieter, and easier to travel with.
Other factors that influence treatment selection include the type of events (obstructive, central, or mixed), nocturnal oxygen levels, body position dependence, and what other conditions you have. If your sleep test was a home study (HST) rather than an in-lab study, your physician may recommend in-lab polysomnography to characterize the apnea more thoroughly before treatment.
Moderate OSA does carry cardiovascular and cognitive risks if left untreated. Talk to your physician about your specific test findings and treatment options.
At moderate OSA severity, the AASM 2019 update lists both CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) and oral appliance therapy (OAT) as first-line treatment options for adults, meaning your physician should discuss both with you, and your preference plays a meaningful role in the decision.
CPAP is generally more effective at reducing AHI; OAT tends to have higher long-term adherence because it's smaller, quieter, and easier to travel with. Positional therapy may be added if your apneas are concentrated in the supine position. If your test was a home sleep test, your physician may recommend an in-lab polysomnography to characterize the apnea more thoroughly before settling on treatment.
Your treatment plan should be made with a clinician who can review your full sleep test results. If you don't have a sleep medicine doctor yet, your primary care physician can refer you.
How to find a sleep specialistUnderstanding Your Sleep Study Report
What every number on your sleep study report actually means, including the sections most patients miss.
12 min read
AHI vs RDI vs ODI: Sleep Study Metrics Explained
The three numbers most people see on their sleep study results: what each one measures, why they can disagree, and which one drives diagnosis.
8 min read
Home Sleep Tests vs In-Lab Polysomnography
When a home sleep test is appropriate, when an in-lab study is required, and what each one actually measures.
9 min read
CPAP vs Oral Appliance Therapy: A Decision Framework
AASM guidelines, candidacy criteria, real-world adherence data, and how to think about which first-line treatment fits which patient.
9 min read
What to Do When CPAP Isn't Working
A practical guide for people who can't tolerate CPAP, covering mask and pressure fixes, oral appliance therapy, hypoglossal nerve stimulation, and other options.
9 min read