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 5 falls in the Mild 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.
Treatment options are broad at this severity: lifestyle changes, oral appliance therapy (OAT), or CPAP for symptomatic patients.
Optional. Adding details from your sleep test report tailors the recommendations below to your specific case.
An AHI of 5–14 events per hour falls into the mild obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) range per AASM scoring criteria. This means you experience between 5 and 14 apneas (full breathing pauses) or hypopneas (shallow breathing events with oxygen desaturation) per hour of sleep on average.
Mild OSA is a real diagnosis with real long-term consequences, including increased cardiovascular risk and excessive daytime sleepiness. It also has the broadest set of treatment options. Many physicians discuss lifestyle modifications first (weight management, alcohol reduction near bedtime, avoiding back sleeping if applicable), with positional therapy and oral appliance therapy (OAT) commonly considered as next steps. CPAP is offered for symptomatic mild patients but is not always first-line at this severity.
Treatment decisions at this level often depend on factors your AHI alone doesn't capture: whether your apneas are concentrated in REM sleep, whether you have significant oxygen desaturation, and how symptomatic you feel during the day. Talk to your physician (and ideally a sleep medicine specialist) about your full sleep test results, not just the AHI number.
At mild OSA severity, treatment options span a wide range. Many physicians start with lifestyle modifications: weight management if applicable, alcohol reduction near bedtime, or side-sleeping if your apneas are positional. Oral appliance therapy (OAT), a custom device fitted by a sleep dentist that holds the lower jaw forward to keep the airway open, is commonly considered, as is CPAP for patients with significant daytime symptoms.
For very mild cases at the low end of this range without notable symptoms, OTC anti-snoring options or a "watch and re-test" approach may be reasonable. Your physician's recommendation will depend on your symptom burden, your other test findings (oxygen levels, event type, position dependence), and your personal preferences.
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.
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