There Are 3 Types of Sleep Apnea

Here’s a look at the three types of sleep apnea and how they differ.
First, What All Types of Sleep Apnea Have in Common
Such moments of apnea occur repeatedly during sleep in people with the condition, causing individuals to partially wake up multiple times during the night as they struggle to breathe. Someone with severe sleep apnea may have these partial arousals from sleep 240 times per night or more during eight hours of sleep.
Because these awakenings are typically very brief, the person with sleep apnea may not even be aware that they are experiencing interrupted sleep.
But the episodes can wreak havoc on the sleep cycle and prevent the person with sleep apnea from getting enough restful, healthy sleep, which can lead to exhaustion, sleepiness, and other symptoms and complications.
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) Is the Most Common Type
Why It Happens
The muscles in the back of the throat support the back of the roof of the mouth (the soft palate), the triangular piece of tissue hanging from the soft palate (the uvula), the tonsils, the side walls of the throat, and the tongue. When these muscles collapse too much, those tissues can fall back into the throat, partially or completely blocking the normal flow of air in your airway. When the airway is blocked you may start to snore, which is why this symptom is common in OSA. (Not everyone who snores has sleep apnea.)
When your brain senses that you aren’t getting enough oxygen, it signals your body to wake up enough so that you can reopen your airway, and you may gasp for air. Simply put, having obstructive sleep apnea means that not enough air can get into the lungs at night, and your brain wakes you up to breathe, says Robson Capasso, MD, chief of sleep surgery and a professor of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.
Risk Factors for Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Research indicates that cases of obstructive sleep apnea have risen significantly in the last two decades. This is likely due to two main factors: Obesity (one of the most common risk factors for OSA) has increased dramatically; and there is more awareness about sleep apnea among doctors and the public at large, so more people are being screened and diagnosed, says James Rowley, MD, a pulmonologist and program director of the Sleep Medicine Fellowship at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.
Diagnosis and Treatment
Obstructive sleep apnea can be treated with a device to keep your airway open, such as a machine that pushes air pressure into your lungs through a mask that fits over your nose and mouth while you sleep, called continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).
Other OSA treatment options include other breathing machines, mouthpieces designed to keep your jaw forward and keep your airway open, or surgery (in more severe cases) to remove tonsils or other tissue that could cause airway obstruction or move your jaw to open up your airway.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also recently approved Zepbound (tirzepatide) as the first prescription medication specifically for adults with moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and obesity.
Your doctor may also advise you to lose weight and to avoid sleeping on your back, to prevent gravity from further pushing your tongue, tonsils, and other soft tissues in your throat into your airway.
Central Sleep Apnea Happens When the Brain Is Involved
Another type of sleep apnea — central sleep apnea — is less common than obstructive sleep apnea. It can also be trickier to diagnose and treat.
Why It Happens
Risk Factors
Certain drugs, such as opioids or benzodiazepines, can also play a role in central sleep apnea. “In patients who use opioids on a chronic basis, the breathing mechanisms can get numbed,” Dr. Capasso explains.
Diagnosis and Treatment
The sleep specialist may also work with your cardiologist or order scans of your head and heart to rule out other contributing illnesses.
Treatment of central sleep apnea typically means addressing the medical problems that are causing the apnea in the first place — for instance, treating heart problems may improve central sleep apnea symptoms. Changing medications can sometimes be beneficial, and positive pressure ventilation can be helpful, too, using either CPAP or another type of ventilator, called bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP).
Like CPAP, BiPAP delivers pressurized air to your lungs, but a BiPAP delivers a higher amount of air pressure when you breathe in than when you breathe out compared with CPAP, which delivers the same amount of pressure as you breathe in and out.
Another ventilator sometimes recommended for central sleep apnea is an adaptive servo-ventilation (ASV) machine. It works similarly to CPAP and BiPAP, but ASV is more specialized in that it measures your breathing patterns and customizes the air pressure to keep your breathing stable throughout the night. However, ASV is not suitable for those with moderate to severe heart failure, so it’s important to talk to your doctor about your medical history before using ASV.
Complex Sleep Apnea Syndrome Is a Combination of OSA and Central Sleep Apnea
Patients with this type of sleep apnea may at first seem to have obstructive sleep apnea, but unlike typical patients with obstructive sleep apnea, these patients’ symptoms are not fully addressed with the use of CPAP. (Since CPAP is usually quite effective in treating obstructive sleep apnea, its failure to alleviate symptoms would suggest the patient had central sleep apnea.)
In patients with complex sleep apnea syndrome, breathing problems persist even after the airway obstruction is addressed and treated, which means something besides the collapsing throat muscles are also contributing to the apnea.
In some patients, complex sleep apnea resolves with continued use of their CPAP device. Others may be treated with a different kind of positive airway pressure therapy.
The problem is that there is still a lot of debate among sleep medicine specialists about what exactly is going on in complex sleep apnea, or what the key characteristics that define it are.
Common Questions & Answers
The Takeaway
- Sleep apnea is a common condition characterized by breathing problems such as loud snoring, pauses in breathing, and gasping for air during sleep. Obstructive sleep apnea is the most common type of sleep apnea.
- Unlike obstructive sleep apnea, which is caused by a mechanical problem that blocks the airway, central sleep apnea occurs because the brain is not sending the proper messages to the muscles that control breathing.
- A third type of sleep apnea called complex sleep apnea, also known as treatment-emergent central sleep apnea, is a combination of obstructive sleep apnea and central sleep apnea. The causes of complex sleep apnea are not yet fully understood.

Abhinav Singh, MD
Medical Reviewer
Abhinav Singh, MD, is a board-certified sleep medicine specialist and the medical director of the Indiana Sleep Center. He is also an associate clinical professor at Marian University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Indianapolis, where he developed and teaches a sleep medicine rotation.
Dr. Singh’s research and clinical practice focus on sleep disorders, including excessive daytime sleepiness, narcolepsy, sleep apnea, insomnia, and sleep education.
Singh is a peer reviewer for the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, Sleep Health (from the National Sleep Foundation) and the Journal of Sleep Disorders: Treatment and Care, and is coauthor of the book Sleep to Heal: 7 Simple Steps to Better Sleep. He has received several Top Doctor recognitions and is the sleep specialist for the Indiana Pacers NBA team.
He lives in the Indianapolis area and enjoys music production and racquet sports.

Katherine Lee
Author
Katherine Lee is a writer and editor who specializes in health, science, and parenting content. She has written for Verywell, where she covered school-age parenting, and worked as an editor at Parenting and Working Mother magazines. She has written and edited numerous articles and essays on science, parenting, and children's health and development for What to Expect, the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences, the American Psychological Association, and Newsweek, among others
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