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Sleep Medicine Nursing Guide

Comprehensive reference for GCC nurses covering sleep disorders, polysomnography, PAP therapy, insomnia management, and culturally-adapted patient education.

OSA & Insomnia PAP Therapy CBT-I GCC Context STOP-BANG Epworth Scale

Sleep Disorders Overview

🫕 Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)

Repetitive collapse of the upper airway during sleep, causing apneas and hypopneas. The most common sleep-related breathing disorder in GCC populations.

Obstructive vs Central Apnea

FeatureObstructiveCentral
AirflowAbsent/reducedAbsent/reduced
Respiratory effortPresent (paradoxical)Absent
MechanismPharyngeal collapseDrive failure
Common causesObesity, large neckHeart failure, opioids
TreatmentCPAP/BiPAPBiPAP ASV/adaptive
OSA prevalence in the GCC is estimated at 35-40% in adults — among the highest globally — driven by high obesity rates, sedentary lifestyle, and consanguinity.
🛉 Insomnia

Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep, or early morning awakening, with daytime impairment, despite adequate opportunity for sleep.

  • Duration <3 months
  • Often situational (stress, illness, travel)
  • Self-limiting in many cases
  • Short-term pharmacotherapy considered
  • ≥3 nights/week for ≥3 months
  • First-line: CBT-I
  • Rule out comorbidities
  • Evaluate for anxiety/depression
Chronic insomnia affects up to 20% of GCC adults; under-diagnosis is common due to cultural reluctance to seek psychiatric-linked care.
Narcolepsy

Neurological disorder of sleep-wake regulation characterised by excessive daytime sleepiness and REM sleep intrusion phenomena.

Key Features

  • Excessive Daytime Sleepiness (EDS): Present in all types; irresistible sleep attacks
  • Cataplexy: Type 1 only — sudden bilateral muscle weakness triggered by strong emotion (laughter, surprise)
  • Sleep paralysis: Inability to move when falling asleep or waking
  • Hypnagogic/hypnopompic hallucinations: Vivid perceptions at sleep onset/offset
  • Fragmented nocturnal sleep: Frequent awakenings despite EDS
Diagnosis confirmed by MSLT (mean sleep latency ≤8 min, ≥2 SOREMPs) and low CSF hypocretin (<110 pg/mL) in Type 1.

Nursing Considerations

  • Safety: driving, machinery, cooking precautions
  • Scheduled naps 2-3x/day can reduce attacks
  • Medications: modafinil, sodium oxybate, venlafaxine for cataplexy
🦴 Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS)

Sensorimotor disorder with an irresistible urge to move the legs, typically worse at rest and in the evening, partially relieved by movement.

Diagnostic Criteria (IRLSSG)

  1. Urge to move legs (sometimes arms)
  2. Worsened at rest / inactivity
  3. Partially/totally relieved by movement
  4. Worse in evening or at night
  5. Not solely explained by another condition

Causes & Associations

  • Iron deficiency (check ferritin <75 ng/mL)
  • Renal failure (common in GCC diabetic patients)
  • Pregnancy (especially 3rd trimester)
  • Dopamine dysregulation (genetic component)
First step: check serum ferritin. Iron supplementation if ferritin <75 ng/mL. Pharmacotherapy: dopamine agonists (pramipexole, ropinirole), gabapentin, pregabalin.
🌍 Parasomnias

Undesirable physical events or experiences occurring during entry to sleep, within sleep, or during arousal from sleep.

  • Sleepwalking (somnambulism): Complex behaviours during NREM N3; amnesia for event; more common in children
  • Sleep terrors: Sudden arousal, screaming, autonomic activation; inconsolable; no memory
  • Confusional arousals: Disorientation on waking from deep sleep
  • REM Sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD): Acting out dreams; loss of REM atonia; strong association with Parkinson's disease / synucleinopathies
  • Nightmare disorder: Recurrent disturbing dreams with full awakening; unlike sleep terrors, recall is vivid
  • Sleep enuresis: Bedwetting beyond expected age
  • Exploding head syndrome: Loud perceived noise at sleep onset; benign
  • Sleep-related eating disorder: Eating during partial arousals; may be medication-induced (zolpidem)
RBD in adults is a biomarker for neurodegenerative disease; refer to neurology.
📋 STOP-BANG Screening Tool

Eight-question validated OSA screening questionnaire widely used in preoperative and general clinical settings.

LetterQuestionScore if Yes
SnoreDo you snore loudly (louder than talking or loud enough through closed door)?1
TiredDo you often feel tired, fatigued, or sleepy during the daytime?1
ObservedHas anyone observed you stop breathing during your sleep?1
PressureDo you have or are you being treated for high blood pressure?1
BMIBMI >35 kg/m²?1
AgeAge >50 years?1
NeckNeck circumference >40 cm?1
GenderMale?1
0-2: LOW RISK
Routine care. Reassess if symptoms change.
3-4: INTERMEDIATE RISK
Consider home sleep test or refer to sleep clinic.
5-8: HIGH RISK
Refer urgently to sleep specialist. Pre-op caution.

Sleep Study & Diagnosis

📉 Polysomnography (PSG) — In-Lab Sleep Study

PSG is the gold-standard diagnostic tool for sleep disorders. It records multiple physiological parameters simultaneously throughout the night.

  • EEG (Electroencephalogram): Monitors brain wave activity to identify sleep stages (N1, N2, N3, REM). Typically 6 channels — F3, F4, C3, C4, O1, O2 (10-20 system)
  • EOG (Electrooculogram): Records eye movements — identifies REM sleep (rapid eye movements) and NREM transitions. Two electrodes: E1 (left), E2 (right)
  • EMG (Electromyogram):
    • Chin EMG: assesses REM muscle atonia (reduced in normal REM, absent in RBD)
    • Leg EMG (bilateral anterior tibialis): detects periodic limb movements (PLM)
  • SaO2 (Pulse Oximetry): Continuous SpO2; oxygen desaturation index (ODI) calculated. Significant desaturations defined as ≥4% drop from baseline
  • Airflow:
    • Oronasal thermistor: thermal sensor detecting apneas (complete cessation ≥10 sec)
    • Nasal pressure cannula: more sensitive; detects hypopneas and flow limitation/flattening (UARS)
  • Respiratory Effort Belts: Piezo or inductance plethysmography belts on chest and abdomen. Distinguish obstructive (effort present) from central (effort absent) events
  • ECG: Single-lead; detects arrhythmias during apneas
  • Body position sensor: Identifies positional OSA (worse supine)
  • Video: Captures parasomnias and movement artefacts
📈 AHI Scoring & Severity Classification

The Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) = (number of apneas + hypopneas) ÷ total sleep time in hours. It is the primary metric for OSA severity.

MILD
5–14
AHI events/hour
MODERATE
15–29
AHI events/hour
SEVERE
≥30
AHI events/hour
AASM 2012 hypopnea criteria: ≥30% reduction in airflow for ≥10 seconds AND ≥3% SaO2 desaturation or arousal. Some labs use ≥4% desaturation rule (Medicare criterion).

Additional PSG Metrics

MetricDefinitionNormal / Significance
Sleep EfficiencyTotal sleep time / Time in bed × 100≥85% normal; <85% suggests insomnia/fragmentation
REM LatencyTime from sleep onset to first REM~90 min normal; <20 min in narcolepsy
WASOWake after sleep onset (minutes)<30 min normal; elevated in insomnia
PLM IndexPLM events per hour of sleep≥15/hr = PLMD (if symptomatic)
ODI (ODI4)Oxygen desaturation index ≥4% drops/hrCorrelates with AHI; <5/hr normal
Arousal IndexEEG arousals per hour<10/hr normal adults
🏠 Home Sleep Testing (HST)

Portable monitoring device (Type 3) used for suspected uncomplicated OSA. Records fewer channels than full PSG.

Typically Measures

  • Airflow (nasal cannula pressure ± thermistor)
  • Respiratory effort (1-2 belts)
  • SpO2 and pulse rate
  • Body position (some devices)

Advantages

  • Lower cost; patient in own environment
  • No technician required overnight
  • Suitable for moderate-high pre-test probability
HST calculates Respiratory Event Index (REI) based on recording time (not sleep time), so may underestimate true AHI. Not suitable if central apnea, CHF, COPD, or parasomnia suspected.
MSLT — Multiple Sleep Latency Test

Objective measure of physiological sleepiness. Gold standard for diagnosing narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia.

Protocol

  1. Full PSG night prior (to ensure adequate sleep)
  2. 5 nap opportunities every 2 hours (09:00, 11:00, 13:00, 15:00, 17:00)
  3. Each nap: 20-minute opportunity; lights off
  4. Record sleep onset latency and REM onset

Interpretation

FindingInterpretation
Mean latency >10 minNormal sleepiness
Mean latency 8-10 minBorderline / mild EDS
Mean latency ≤8 minPathological sleepiness
≥2 SOREMPsNarcolepsy (with above)
≤8 min, <2 SOREMPsIdiopathic hypersomnia
SOREMP = Sleep-Onset REM Period (REM within 15 minutes of sleep onset).

PAP Therapy Nursing

💨 CPAP vs BiPAP vs APAP
FeatureCPAPBiPAPAPAP
Full nameContinuous PAPBilevel PAPAuto-titrating PAP
Pressure deliverySingle fixed pressureIPAP (higher) + EPAP (lower)Adjusts breath by breath
Typical range4–20 cmH2OIPAP 8–25 / EPAP 4–20 cmH2O4–20 cmH2O range set
Primary useOSA first-lineComplex apnea, CPAP-intolerant, OHS, COPD overlapOSA with variable needs
ComfortConstant pressure (less comfortable for some)Easier exhalationMinimum pressure at rest
DataAHI, leak, usage timeAHI, leak, trigger, cycle dataPressure histogram, AHI, leak
CostLowestHighestModerate
Obesity Hypoventilation Syndrome (OHS) — common in GCC obese patients — often requires BiPAP due to hypoventilation component. IPAP-EPAP difference (PS) should be ≥4 cmH2O.
👔 Mask Types

Nasal Mask

  • Covers nose only; most commonly prescribed
  • Allows natural mouth breathing (if mouth closed)
  • Good for moderate-high pressures
  • Contraindicated: mouth breathing, deviated septum

Full-Face Mask (Oronasal)

  • Covers nose and mouth
  • For mouth breathers or nasal obstruction
  • Higher dead space — may require pressure increase
  • Harder to maintain seal; more claustrophobic

Nasal Pillow Interface

  • Small inserts into nostrils; minimal contact
  • Best for claustrophobic patients; beard wearers
  • May cause nasal soreness at higher pressures (>15 cmH2O)
  • Not suitable for pressures >15-16 cmH2O in most patients
Mask leak is the most common compliance issue. Refit and reseal checks should be performed at every follow-up visit.
💧 Humidification Settings

Heated humidification reduces upper airway dryness and improves compliance — especially important in hot, air-conditioned GCC environments.

Integrated Heated Humidifier

  • Settings typically 1-6 (device dependent)
  • Start at mid-range (3-4); adjust based on symptoms
  • GCC climate: indoor air conditioning = very dry air → higher humidification often needed

Heated Tube (Climate Control)

  • Prevents condensation ("rainout") in tubing
  • Temperature setting: typically 27°C
  • Essential in GCC with extreme temperature differentials

Common Humidifier Issues

  • Rainout: Condensation in tube — increase heated tube temperature
  • Dryness: Increase humidifier level; ensure water chamber full
  • Sinus congestion: Adjust humidity; consider nasal saline spray
📋 Compliance Monitoring Standards
≥ 4 hours per night on ≥ 70% of nights
(US Medicare standard; most international guidelines)

Modern PAP devices record data on SD card or via cloud (e.g., ResMed myAir, Philips DreamMapper). Nurses should review:

  • Average nightly usage (hours)
  • Residual AHI (should be <5/hr on therapy)
  • Mask leak (large leak >24 L/min)
  • Pressure percentile (APAP: 90th/95th percentile)
TimepointAction
1 weekPhone check; troubleshoot early issues
1 monthDownload data; mask check; assess compliance
3 monthsFull review; consider pressure titration changes
6-12 monthsAnnual review; equipment check; filter change
Target outcome: Residual AHI <5/hr AND ≥4h use ≥70% nights AND symptom resolution (ESS <10).
🚨 Side Effects & Troubleshooting Guide
ProblemCauseNursing Intervention
Aerophagia (air swallowing)Air enters oesophagus/stomach; often high pressureReduce CPAP pressure if possible; consider BiPAP; sleep on side; avoid eating 2h before bed
Mask leakPoor fit, facial hair, movementRefit mask; try different size/style; use mask liner; tighten headgear (not overtighten)
ClaustrophobiaMask anxiety; psychologicalStart with mask off device; practice during day; try nasal pillows; desensitisation; anxiolytic if needed
Pressure intolerance (exhaling against)CPAP pressure too high subjectivelyEnable EPR (Expiratory Pressure Relief); try APAP lower range; BiPAP if unable to tolerate
Nasal congestionDry air, cold, rhinitisIncrease humidification; nasal saline; intranasal steroid; treat allergic rhinitis
Dry mouthMouth breathing (full-face mask or chin strap)Chin strap with nasal mask; switch to full-face; increase humidification
Skin irritation / ulcersExcess pressure on skin; poor fitAdjust fit; use mask cushion; pad pressure points; trial different mask style; allow skin to heal
Residual high AHIInadequate pressure; mask leak; positional; central eventsReview data; increase pressure; positional therapy; consider complex/central apnea evaluation
Noise disturbance (patient/partner)Mask leak; device noiseSeal mask properly; check tubing connections; newer quiet devices; partner earplugs

Insomnia Management

🧐 CBT-I — Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia

CBT-I is the first-line treatment for chronic insomnia per AASM, NICE, and European Sleep Research Society guidelines. It addresses perpetuating factors that maintain insomnia.

Limits time in bed (TIB) to actual sleep time initially to consolidate sleep and build sleep drive.

  1. Calculate average total sleep time (TST) from sleep diary (typically 2 weeks)
  2. Set TIB = TST (minimum 5 hours)
  3. Fixed wake time; bedtime calculated backward
  4. Once sleep efficiency ≥85% for 5 nights → increase TIB by 15-20 min
  5. Titrate until optimal TST achieved (7-9h for adults)
Avoid sleep restriction in bipolar disorder (may trigger mania), epilepsy, or severe daytime impairment occupational safety risks.

Re-associates the bed with sleepiness and sleep, breaking the learned arousal-bed association.

  • Use bed only for sleep and intimacy — no TV, phone, reading in bed
  • Go to bed only when sleepy (not just tired)
  • If unable to sleep after ~20 min, get up; do quiet activity; return when sleepy
  • Arise at the same time every morning regardless of sleep quality
  • Avoid daytime napping (or limit to <20 min before 3pm)
  • Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR): Systematically tense and release muscle groups; reduces somatic arousal
  • Diaphragmatic breathing: 4-7-8 technique; activates parasympathetic
  • Imagery rehearsal: Peaceful mental scenes at bedtime
  • Mindfulness-Based: MBSR adapted for insomnia; growing evidence base
  • Biofeedback: EMG/EEG feedback to reduce hyperarousal
  • Sleep misperception correction: Many insomnia patients underestimate sleep time
  • Challenging unhelpful beliefs: "I must get 8 hours or I can't function"
  • Decatastrophising: Reframe consequences of poor night
  • Paradoxical intention: Try to stay awake reduces sleep effort and anxiety
  • Sleep scheduling: Bed diary + consistent schedule reinforcement
🏌 Sleep Hygiene Education
  • Dark, cool (18-20°C), quiet bedroom
  • Comfortable mattress and pillows
  • Use blackout curtains (GCC early sunrise)
  • White noise if external noise problematic
  • Caffeine after 2pm
  • Alcohol within 3h of bedtime
  • Nicotine near bedtime (stimulant)
  • Heavy meals within 2h of sleep
  • Screen exposure (blue light) 1h before bed
  • Vigorous exercise within 2-3h of sleep
  • Consistent wake time 7 days/week
  • Wind-down routine 30-60 min
  • Light exposure in morning (circadian anchor)
  • Regular daytime exercise
  • Limit fluid intake 2h before bed (nocturia)
💊 Pharmacological Options — GCC Formulary Context
Drug ClassExamplesMechanismNotes / GCC Status
MelatoninMelatonin 0.5–5 mgMT1/MT2 agonist; circadian shiftOTC in UAE; prescription in Saudi Arabia. First-line for circadian disruption, jet lag, elderly insomnia. Low side-effect profile.
Z-DrugsZolpidem, zopiclone, eszopicloneGABA-A positive modulator (selective BZ1)Restricted in GCC. Zolpidem 5-10mg: short-term only. Risk: dependence, rebound insomnia, parasomnias (sleep-eating, driving — esp. women). Reduce dose in elderly, hepatic impairment.
Sedating antidepressantsMirtazapine 7.5-15mg, trazodone 50-100mg, doxepin 3-6mg (low-dose)H1, 5HT2A antagonismAvailable in GCC formularies. Useful for comorbid depression/anxiety. Mirtazapine: weight gain (concern in obese GCC patients). Low-dose doxepin: approved specifically for insomnia.
Orexin antagonistsSuvorexant, lemborexantDual orexin receptor antagonistLimited availability in GCC; not widely listed on formulary. Novel mechanism; lower abuse potential than BZDs.
BenzodiazepinesTemazepam, lorazepam, clonazepamGABA-A potentiatorStrictly regulated in GCC (schedule II/III). Short-term only. High risk: dependence, tolerance, falls in elderly, respiratory depression with OSA.
AntihistaminesDiphenhydramine, doxylamineH1 antagonistOTC in some GCC countries. Not recommended for chronic insomnia. Rapid tolerance (3-5 days). Significant anticholinergic effects in elderly.
CRITICAL: Benzodiazepines and Z-drugs must be used with extreme caution in undiagnosed or untreated OSA — they suppress respiratory drive and upper airway tone, potentially causing fatal respiratory depression.
📈 Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS)

Eight-item self-report questionnaire assessing likelihood of dozing in various situations. Use the interactive version in the Calculators tab.

ScoreInterpretationAction
0–10Normal sleepinessReassure; reassess if symptoms change
11–12Mild excessive sleepinessSleep hygiene counselling; review medications; screen for OSA
13–15Moderate excessive sleepinessRefer for sleep evaluation; OSA screening; driving safety assessment
16–24Severe excessive sleepinessUrgent referral; consider driving restriction; rule out narcolepsy
ESS scores ≥11 in GCC truck/bus drivers and HCWs warrant urgent evaluation — driving drowsy is a major road safety issue in the region.

GCC Context

🏫 Sleep Lab Accreditation in the GCC
  • Sleep labs accredited under the Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH) and Dubai Health Authority (DHA)
  • Standards align with Joint Commission International (JCI) and AASM guidelines
  • Sleep technologists require certification (RPSGT credential increasingly recognised)
  • Abu Dhabi: sleep medicine falls under respiratory/pulmonology or neurology departments
  • UAE National Sleep Programme increasingly active post-COVID
  • Saudi Commission for Health Specialties (SCHS) oversees sleep medicine training
  • Saudi Thoracic Society (STS) guidelines for OSA management
  • Major sleep centres: King Faisal Specialist Hospital, King Abdulaziz University Hospital
  • Sleep medicine emerging as subspecialty; demand exceeds supply of specialists
  • Home sleep testing widely used given geographic distribution of patients
Other GCC countries (Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman) generally follow MOH licensing frameworks. Many GCC sleep labs are accredited by JCI as part of hospital-wide accreditation. AASM accreditation increasingly sought.
📚 High OSA Prevalence in GCC

The GCC region has some of the highest OSA prevalence rates globally. Multiple converging risk factors explain this:

  • Obesity: UAE adult obesity prevalence ~27-33%; Saudi Arabia ~28-35%. Obesity is the single strongest modifiable OSA risk factor. Neck circumference >40 cm strongly correlates with OSA.
  • Type 2 Diabetes: GCC has one of the highest T2DM rates globally (15-20% of adults). Insulin resistance and fluid retention worsen upper airway collapsibility.
  • Metabolic syndrome: Highly prevalent; central adiposity predominant pattern in Arab populations
  • Physical inactivity: Sedentary lifestyle; extreme heat limits outdoor exercise
  • Late night eating culture: Large late meals, delayed sleep timing shifts circadian phase
  • Consanguinity: Higher rates of craniofacial features (retrognathia, small jaw) associated with OSA
  • Underdiagnosis: Cultural normalisation of snoring ("snoring = deep sleep"); gender-related barriers for women
  • Indoor sedentary AC culture: Year-round indoor lifestyle reduces sleep-promoting light exposure
GCC Nurses Must Know: OSA is not just a snoring problem. Untreated moderate-severe OSA doubles cardiovascular mortality risk, worsens glycaemic control in T2DM, causes hypertension, and significantly increases road traffic accident risk.
Ramadan & Sleep Pattern Disruption

Ramadan represents a unique circadian and sleep challenge for the GCC Muslim population. Healthcare workers must understand and counsel accordingly.

  • Total sleep time reduces by 1-1.5 hours on average during Ramadan
  • Delayed sleep phase: Taraweeh prayers (late evening) + Suhoor (pre-dawn meal) shift sleep to 2-5am
  • Sleep fragmentation: waking for Suhoor disrupts slow-wave and REM sleep
  • Daytime napping increases (Qailula — traditional Islamic midday nap)
  • OSA patients: fasting affects PAP compliance; may skip device if sleeping at irregular times
  • Encourage maintaining CPAP use even at shifted sleep times
  • Counselling: Qailula nap is Islamic tradition — a scheduled 20-min nap is not harmful
  • Adjust PAP humidification: prolonged fasting may increase mouth dryness
  • Night-shift nurses during Ramadan: higher fatigue risk; sleep before and after shift advised
  • Screen for increased sleepiness post-Ramadan (sleep debt recovery)
  • Medications: advise on timing of sleep aids around Iftar/Suhoor
💨 Night Shift Nursing & Circadian Rhythm

GCC hospitals rely heavily on expatriate nurses, many of whom rotate shifts. Night shift work disorder is prevalent but under-recognised.

Circadian Disruption Effects

  • Chronic sleep deficit accumulation
  • Increased risk of metabolic syndrome, obesity, T2DM
  • Higher rates of anxiety and depression
  • Impaired immune function; higher infection susceptibility
  • Increased medication errors during night hours (2-6am nadir)

Mitigation Strategies

  • Bright light exposure during night shift (alerting)
  • Blue light avoidance driving home after shift
  • Blackout curtains and ear plugs for daytime sleep
  • Strategic caffeine use (first half of shift only)
  • Melatonin (0.5-3mg) before daytime sleep
  • Fixed shift rotations preferred over rapid rotation
🌞 Heat, Humidity & Sleep in the GCC

The GCC climate — extreme heat (up to 50°C), high humidity (Gulf coast), and desert dryness — uniquely affects sleep quality.

Temperature & Sleep

  • Core body temperature must fall 1-2°C to initiate sleep
  • Hot environments impair this thermoregulatory process
  • AC dependency is near-universal in GCC: bedroom temp should be 18-22°C
  • Sudden AC failure (power cut) → significant insomnia, especially in summer

Humidity Effects

  • High humidity impairs evaporative cooling → increased thermal discomfort
  • PAP therapy: GCC dry AC air increases need for humidification
  • Gulf coast cities (Abu Dhabi, Doha): summer humidity 80-90% outdoors vs. very dry indoors
GCC-Specific Melatonin: Available OTC in UAE pharmacies. Saudi Arabia requires prescription. Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain: generally prescription-required. Oman: available in select pharmacies. Doses used in GCC typically 0.5-5mg; higher doses not shown more effective.

Patient Education

👔 CPAP Mask Fitting Guide
  1. Measure face: Assess nasal bridge, jaw width, presence of facial hair, mouth breathing habit
  2. Select mask type: Nasal pillow (minimal contact) → nasal mask (most common) → full-face (mouth breathers)
  3. Size selection: Most masks have S/M/L; use sizing gauge provided by manufacturer
  4. Fitting position: Fit mask sitting upright, then lie down to check seal
  5. Headgear adjustment: Should be snug but not tight. You should be able to slide one finger under the strap
  6. Pressure test: Turn device on; check for leaks around cushion; minor repositioning to seal
  7. Demonstrate wear: Ask patient to wear mask for 5 minutes without device to build tolerance
Over-tightening the headgear causes skin breakdown and increases leak (distorts cushion shape). Tighten straps only enough to achieve adequate seal.
🧹 CPAP Equipment Cleaning
ComponentFrequencyMethod
Mask cushion/pillowDailyWarm water + mild soap; air dry away from direct sun
Headgear strapsWeeklyHand wash in warm soapy water; air dry
TubingWeeklySoak in warm water + soap; rinse thoroughly; hang to dry
Humidifier chamberDailyEmpty residual water; daily rinse; weekly soak in mild disinfectant
Filter (foam)MonthlyRinse; allow to dry; replace every 6 months
Filter (ultrafine)Replace onlyReplace every 6 months; do not wash
Use only distilled water in the humidifier chamber. Tap water in GCC (especially desalinated water) leaves mineral deposits and promotes microbial growth.
Travel with CPAP

Practical Tips

  • Carry-on only: Never check CPAP equipment; international standards allow carry-on
  • Airport security: Remove from bag separately for X-ray (like laptop); not counted as an extra carry-on in most GCC airlines
  • Power adaptor: Most modern CPAP machines are dual voltage (100-240V); check your device. Pack universal adaptor
  • Medical letter: Obtain letter from physician / sleep clinic for customs; Arabic and English versions for GCC travel
  • Distilled water: Buy at destination; available at pharmacies and supermarkets worldwide
  • Altitude: APAP devices auto-adjust. Fixed CPAP may need altitude adjustment (some models auto-correct; check with provider)
  • Hajj / Umrah: CPAP use possible in Makkah hotels. Advise patients to carry extension cords; confirm hotel power access in advance
🥑 Positional Therapy

Approximately 30-60% of OSA patients have positional OSA — AHI is ≥2× worse in the supine position than lateral position.

Identifying Positional OSA

  • PSG/HST data shows position-specific AHI
  • Lateral AHI <5 + supine AHI ≥15 = purely positional OSA
  • May normalise AHI entirely without PAP in mild-moderate positional OSA

Positional Therapy Methods

  • Positional alarm device: Vibrates when supine (e.g., Night Shift, NightBalance)
  • Tennis ball technique: Attach to back of pyjamas — traditional, low-cost, inconsistent evidence
  • Positional pillows: Wedge pillows to maintain lateral decubitus
  • Head of bed elevation: 30° elevation reduces AHI (useful in OHS, acid reflux)
Combined positional therapy + CPAP may allow lower PAP pressures and improve tolerance in positional OSA patients.
Lifestyle Education for Sleep Patients
  • 10% weight reduction = ~26% reduction in AHI (Peppard et al.)
  • In GCC: bariatric surgery increasingly common; post-surgical AHI improvement significant but partial (CPAP still often needed)
  • Upper body adiposity directly reduces airway calibre
  • Exercise independently improves OSA, even without weight loss (pharyngeal muscle tone)
  • GLP-1 agonists (semaglutide) — trials showing AHI reduction; increasingly prescribed in GCC
  • Alcohol: Relaxes upper airway muscles; worsens OSA significantly; avoid within 3-4h of sleep
  • Sedatives / hypnotics: Suppress arousal response; potentially dangerous in untreated OSA
  • Opioids: Cause central apneas; complex sleep-disordered breathing
  • Nicotine: Upper airway inflammation → worsens snoring and apnea. Smoking cessation counselling
  • Note: Alcohol not culturally common in GCC Muslim majority, but relevant for expats and non-Muslim residents
  • Untreated OSA increases road traffic accident risk by 2-7x
  • GCC has among the highest RTA mortality rates globally (disproportionate)
  • Educate patients: legal obligation to inform licensing authority in some GCC countries
  • ESS ≥11 or known severe untreated OSA → advise against driving until treated
  • Commercial drivers (truck, bus, taxi): mandatory sleep screening increasingly enforced in UAE/Saudi Arabia
  • After effective CPAP treatment (AHI <5, compliant): driving restrictions generally lifted with physician clearance

Interactive Calculators

STOP-BANG OSA Screening Tool
Answer Yes or No to each question. Score ≥3 indicates elevated OSA risk.
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS)
Rate the chance of dozing off in the following situations (0 = would never doze, 1 = slight chance, 2 = moderate chance, 3 = high chance).

Practice MCQs — Sleep Medicine

Click an answer to reveal instant feedback. 10 questions covering key sleep medicine nursing concepts.