Sleep Apnea in Veterans:
Why Military Service Makes It Worse, and What to Do About It
43–76% of veterans with PTSD screen positive for OSA, but standard screening tools miss most of them. Three mechanisms, the CPAP adherence gap, and the VA disability pathway.
Key Takeaways
- VA-diagnosed sleep-related breathing disorders quadrupled from 5.5% to 22.2% between FY2012 and FY2018, one of the fastest-growing diagnoses in the system.
- 43–76% of veterans with PTSD screen positive for OSA. Classic risk factors (obesity, old age, snoring) are poor predictors; young, fit veterans with no witnessed apnea can have severe disease.
- CPAP adherence in veterans with PTSD: <50%, versus 70% in veterans without PTSD. Mask claustrophobia and hypervigilant rejection are the primary barriers; desensitization protocols substantially improve this.
- Consistent CPAP use over 6 months produces significant measurable reductions in PTSD symptom severity, the bidirectional relationship means treating OSA treats PTSD and vice versa.
What Is Sleep Apnea, and How Does It Differ in Veterans?
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a disorder in which the upper airway repeatedly collapses during sleep, interrupting breathing for at least ten seconds at a time. The Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) measures these interruptions per hour: 5–14 is mild, 15–29 is moderate, 30 or more is severe. Each event drops blood oxygen, triggers a partial arousal, and fragments sleep architecture. Most people never consciously wake, but their sleep never reaches the deep restorative stages it needs.
In the general population, the primary risk factors are obesity, male sex, older age, and large neck circumference. In veterans, that model breaks down.
The veteran risk profile looks different
Classic screening fails
The STOP-BANG questionnaire misses PTSD-profile veterans: young, lean OEF/OIF veterans in their 30s with no partner to report snoring can have severe OSA (AHI >30). Standard paper screening tools are calibrated to civilian risk factors that simply don’t apply to this population.
The three-pathway mechanism
Veterans face three compounding pathways: (1) hypervigilance that prevents pharyngeal muscle relaxation; (2) deployment sleep debt that may affect upper airway tone over time; and (3) TBI-related brainstem dysregulation that produces central sleep apnea, distinct from obstructive apnea.
The CPAP adherence gap
Veterans with PTSD have <50% CPAP adherence compared to 70% in veterans without PTSD. Mask claustrophobia and hypervigilant rejection of a facial device during sleep are the primary drivers, not laziness. Gradual desensitization protocols substantially improve adherence.
Who this applies to most
- Veterans with PTSD: OSA risk is profoundly elevated (43–76% in multiple studies) and standard screening tools may not flag you. Ask for a sleep study, not just a questionnaire.
- Post-9/11 veterans (OEF/OIF/OND): Studies of this cohort show 69% high-risk OSA screening in PTSD clinic settings, often in young, physically fit individuals.
- Women veterans: Standard screening tools underperform in women, who often present with fatigue and unrefreshing sleep rather than witnessed apnea or loud snoring.
- Active duty service members: Diagnosis is not career-limiting. Treated sleep apnea is compatible with most military occupational specialties, and getting diagnosed now creates a record that supports VA benefits later.
How common is sleep apnea in the military population?
VA administrative data show sleep-related breathing disorders more than quadrupled over six years. Prevalence rose from 5.5% in FY2012 to 22.2% in FY2018 (Folmer et al., 2020).[1] Among veterans presenting to a VA outpatient PTSD clinic, 69.2% of 159 veterans screened as high risk[2] for OSA (Colvonen et al., 2015).[2] A subsequent meta-analysis found OSA prevalence in PTSD populations ranging from 43.6% to 75.7% (Zhang et al., 2017).[5]
| Population | Estimated OSA Prevalence |
|---|---|
| General US adults | 5–10% |
| All VA patients (FY2018) | 22.2% diagnosed |
| Veterans with PTSD (meta-analysis range) | 43.6–75.7% |
| OEF/OIF/OND veterans in PTSD clinic | 69.2% high-risk screen |
What Drives This: The Mechanism
Why does combat service increase sleep apnea risk?
Pathway 1: Hypervigilance and the arousal floor. Hypervigilance is a core PTSD symptom: the brain’s threat-detection system locked in chronic readiness. During sleep, the brain cycles through stages of progressively deeper relaxation. A hypervigilant nervous system resists this, maintaining elevated cortisol and sustained norepinephrine activity through the night. This may directly prevent the deep muscle relaxation needed to maintain a patent airway, or cause the brain to interpret normal respiratory fluctuations as threats, triggering arousals before the airway fully closes.
Pathway 2: Cumulative sleep debt from deployment. Military service systematically destroys sleep: watch schedules, round-the-clock operations, noise, heat, and light pollution in forward operating environments. Years of fragmented and insufficient sleep alter circadian misalignment patterns and may affect upper airway muscle tone over time.
Pathway 3: TBI and brainstem respiratory dysregulation. TBI disrupts hypothalamic function and brainstem respiratory regulation, which can produce central sleep apnea, a form in which the brain intermittently fails to send the signal to breathe, distinct from the mechanical airway collapse of obstructive apnea.
How do sleep apnea and PTSD reinforce each other?
The relationship between PTSD and OSA is bidirectional; each worsens the other. PTSD symptoms worsen sleep: hyperarousal delays sleep onset, nightmares fragment REM sleep. Severe OSA then increases the frequency of nighttime arousals, which can trigger or intensify nightmares, heighten daytime irritability, and reduce the cognitive resources needed for trauma processing.
What the Research Shows
CPAP is the most effective treatment for moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea. Evidence in veterans is consistent: CPAP improves sleep quality, reduces PTSD symptom severity, and decreases nightmare frequency.
In a prospective study of 59 veterans with confirmed PTSD and newly diagnosed OSA, consistent CPAP use over six months produced a statistically significant reduction[3] in PTSD checklist scores (PCL-S: 60.6 versus 52.3 at six months[3]; p<0.001) (Orr et al., 2017).[3] A separate cohort study found a dose-dependent relationship: every 10% improvement in CPAP adherence[7] was associated with measurable reduction in nightmare frequency (El-Solh et al., 2010).[7]
“Fragmented sleep takes a much heavier toll on cognition than just poor sleep. If you are not sleeping, you are not processing what you have just learned.”
Peter Colvonen, PhD, Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, UC San Diego / VA San Diego Healthcare System
What the critics say
Collen and colleagues (2016) found[6] that CPAP outcomes in OSA-plus-PTSD populations are measurably worse than in OSA-alone populations: resolution of daytime sleepiness, sleep quality normalization, and quality-of-life improvement all occur at lower rates when PTSD is comorbid.[6] This critique applies specifically to treatment effect size expectations, it does not challenge the finding that CPAP helps, but it calibrates how much help to expect. CPAP is part of an integrated treatment approach, not a standalone fix.
What the Evidence Doesn’t Say
Causality direction. Whether PTSD neurobiologically causes OSA (through sustained sympathetic activation reshaping upper airway tone) or whether both share common upstream causes remains unresolved.
Optimal treatment sequencing. No large RCT has established whether veterans should treat OSA first, PTSD first, or both concurrently. Most VA guidelines recommend concurrent treatment where feasible.
Women veterans specifically. The foundational OSA-PTSD studies are predominantly male. Whether the screening tools, risk estimates, and treatment outcomes generalize equally to women veterans remains an evidence gap.
TBI-specific pathways. The contribution of TBI to central (non-obstructive) sleep apnea in veterans is an emerging area without strong RCT evidence.
Clinical Implications
| Application | Evidence | Strength | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Objective sleep testing over questionnaire-only screening | STOP-BANG underperforms in PTSD population; young, lean veterans at high risk without classic predictors | Strong | Order polysomnography or home sleep apnea test for any PTSD patient with sleep complaints |
| CPAP desensitization protocols for PTSD | Veterans with PTSD have <50% CPAP adherence vs 70% in non-PTSD; gradual mask exposure improves adherence | Moderate | Refer to behavioral sleep medicine alongside CPAP initiation |
| Concurrent OSA and PTSD treatment | Each condition sustains the other; concurrent treatment improves both outcomes | Moderate | Avoid treating OSA in isolation when PTSD is active |
| TBI evaluation for central sleep apnea | TBI-PTSD patients have elevated central apnea rates; CPAP alone may be insufficient | Moderate | Request polysomnographic differentiation; consider ASV if CPAP fails |
| VA disability nexus documentation | Service connection for OSA secondary to PTSD or TBI requires nexus letter | Policy | Clinicians treating veterans should provide nexus letters when clinical linkage is established |
What Can You Do?
| How to Implement | Expected Benefit (and Why) | Evidence Strength | Context Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Request objective sleep testing | |||
| Ask your VA primary care or mental health provider specifically for a referral to sleep medicine, not a screening questionnaire alone | Accurate diagnosis is the prerequisite for all treatment, because standard tools miss a substantial proportion of at-risk veterans | Strong (replicated observational) | Women veterans: emphasize daytime fatigue and unrefreshing sleep rather than snoring |
| Start CPAP with gradual desensitization | |||
| Ask your VA sleep clinic about structured desensitization programs: wearing the mask without pressure during the day first, then with increasing pressure over weeks | Reduces claustrophobia-driven dropout, because the hypervigilant nervous system needs graduated exposure before accepting the mask as safe | Moderate (observational; VA-specific programs exist) | Veterans with severe PTSD may need behavioral health support alongside sleep clinic |
| Track CPAP adherence data | |||
| Most CPAP machines record nightly data; ask your sleep clinic to download and review it at follow-ups | Dose-dependent response: more hours per night correlates with greater PTSD symptom reduction, because the PTSD-OSA bidirectional loop requires consistent OSA control to break | Strong (El-Solh 2010) | TBI: if CPAP is ineffective despite good adherence, central sleep apnea may be present |
| Address PTSD and OSA concurrently | |||
| Engage both sleep medicine and mental health treatment simultaneously | Each condition sustains the other; treating both together accelerates improvement in both, because the bidirectional reinforcement loop requires both prongs to be addressed | Moderate (expert consensus, limited RCT) | Active duty: discuss confidentiality concerns with your provider |
| File for VA disability if service-connected | |||
| File VA Form 21-526EZ listing sleep apnea; if secondary to PTSD or TBI, note the secondary relationship and provide a nexus letter | Most veterans using CPAP qualify for 50% rating under Diagnostic Code 6847, because CPAP-required treatment meets the VA’s threshold for that rating tier | Policy / legal | Gulf War veterans: sleep apnea is not currently a Gulf War presumptive |
| Consider mandibular advancement device if CPAP fails | |||
| Ask for referral to VA dental or maxillofacial services | Oral appliances show comparable improvement in PTSD symptoms in one crossover trial, because adherence matters more than theoretical efficacy | Moderate (single crossover trial) | 58% of PTSD patients preferred oral device over CPAP in one study |
How to Use AI With This Information
When to Work With a Professional
Sleep apnea requires objective measurement. You cannot self-diagnose it, and standard questionnaires miss a substantial proportion of veterans at risk. See a VA sleep medicine provider if:
- You wake feeling unrefreshed regardless of how much you sleep
- A partner has noticed pauses in your breathing during sleep
- You experience excessive daytime fatigue, difficulty concentrating, or irritability not fully explained by PTSD or other conditions
- Your PTSD treatment is progressing slowly, undiagnosed OSA may be limiting treatment response
- You have a history of TBI, which independently increases both OSA and central sleep apnea risk
FAQ’s
Does the VA cover sleep apnea treatment?
Yes. Veterans with service-connected sleep apnea receive VA-covered CPAP equipment, supplies, and follow-up care. Sleep apnea secondary to PTSD or TBI can be service-connected even without an in-service diagnosis. A nexus letter linking the conditions is required.
Can I get VA disability for sleep apnea?
Yes. The VA rates sleep apnea under Diagnostic Code 6847: 0% (asymptomatic but documented), 30% (persistent daytime sleepiness), 50% (requires CPAP use), or 100% (chronic respiratory failure or requiring tracheostomy). Most veterans using CPAP qualify for the 50% rating.
Why do veterans with PTSD have higher rates of sleep apnea?
The leading hypothesis involves hypervigilance: the combat-trained threat-detection system remaining chronically activated, which may prevent the deep pharyngeal muscle relaxation that normally keeps airways open during sleep.
Is CPAP harder to tolerate with PTSD?
Yes. Veterans with PTSD have significantly lower CPAP adherence. Mask claustrophobia, nightmares triggered by facial pressure, and hypervigilant rejection of the device all contribute. VA sleep clinics offering gradual desensitization protocols substantially improve adherence.
REFERENCES
- Folmer RL et al. (2020). Prevalence and management of sleep disorders in the VHA. Sleep Medicine. doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2020.06.011
- Colvonen PJ et al. (2015). OSA and PTSD among OEF/OIF/OND veterans. J Clin Sleep Med. doi:10.5664/jcsm.4692
- Orr JE et al. (2017). Treatment of OSA with CPAP is associated with improvement in PTSD symptoms among veterans. J Clin Sleep Med. doi:10.5664/jcsm.6386
- Mysliwiec V et al. (2022). Bi-directional relationship between PTSD and OSA/insomnia in a large US military cohort. Sleep Health. doi:10.1016/j.sleh.2022.07.002
- Zhang Y et al. (2017). Prevalence of OSA in patients with PTSD: A meta-analysis. Sleep Medicine. doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2017.04.020
- Collen JF et al. (2012). Impact of PTSD on CPAP adherence in OSA patients. J Clin Sleep Med. doi:10.5664/jcsm.2260
- El-Solh AA et al. (2010). Positive airway pressure adherence in veterans with PTSD. Sleep. doi:10.5665/sleep.3140
- Ibrahim NA et al. (2024). Prevalence of central sleep apnea among veterans. SLEEP Advances. doi:10.1093/sleepadvances/zpae011
- Goldstein LA et al. (2025). Prevalence of OSA among veterans and nonveterans. Am J Health Promot. doi:10.1177/08901171241273443
- Calderon JL et al. (2017). Prevalence and correlates of sleep apnea among US male veterans. Prev Chronic Dis. doi:10.5888/pcd14.160365

