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Obstructive Sleep Apnea — Neurological Evaluation

VERSION: 1.0 CREATED: February 7, 2026 STATUS: Draft


DIAGNOSIS: Obstructive Sleep Apnea — Neurological Evaluation

ICD-10: G47.33 (Obstructive sleep apnea)

CPT CODES: 95810 (Polysomnography (PSG)), 95800 (Home sleep apnea test (HSAT)), 85025 (CBC), 80053 (CMP), 84443 (TSH), 83036 (HbA1c), 80061 (Lipid panel), 70553 (MRI brain with and without contrast), 96132 (Neurocognitive testing)

SYNONYMS: OSA, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, sleep-disordered breathing, upper airway resistance syndrome, OSAS, sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome

SCOPE: Neurological evaluation and management of obstructive sleep apnea in adults. Focuses on neurology-specific aspects: stroke risk assessment, cognitive impact, epilepsy interaction, headache relationship, and neuropathy/autonomic effects. Excludes primary pulmonary/ENT management, central sleep apnea (separate entity), and pediatric OSA. Complements pulmonology/sleep medicine primary management.


DEFINITIONS: - Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA): Repetitive partial or complete upper airway collapse during sleep causing intermittent hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and sleep fragmentation; associated with significant neurological morbidity including stroke, cognitive decline, and seizure exacerbation - Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI): Number of apneas and hypopneas per hour of sleep; mild 5-14, moderate 15-29, severe ≥30 - Excessive Daytime Sleepiness (EDS): Inability to maintain sustained wakefulness during the day; common neurological symptom of untreated OSA affecting cognitive performance and driving safety - Intermittent Hypoxia: Cyclic oxygen desaturation and reoxygenation during obstructive events; principal mechanism of OSA-related neurological injury through oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction - Oxygen Desaturation Index (ODI): Number of oxygen desaturation events (≥3% or ≥4% drop) per hour of sleep; correlates with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risk - CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure): First-line treatment maintaining airway patency via positive pressure; demonstrated neuroprotective benefit including stroke risk reduction, cognitive improvement, and seizure frequency reduction - STOP-BANG Score: Validated screening questionnaire (Snoring, Tiredness, Observed apneas, Pressure, BMI >35, Age >50, Neck >40 cm, Gender male); score ≥3 indicates high risk for OSA


DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:

OSA Diagnosis (ICSD-3/AASM):

  1. OSA with symptoms: AHI ≥5 events/hour on PSG or HSAT AND at least one of:
    • Excessive daytime sleepiness not explained by other factors
    • Observed habitual snoring, breathing interruptions, or gasping/choking during sleep
    • Witnessed apneas
    • Diagnosed hypertension, mood disorder, cognitive dysfunction, coronary artery disease, stroke, CHF, atrial fibrillation, or type 2 diabetes mellitus
  2. OSA without symptoms: AHI ≥15 events/hour on PSG or HSAT regardless of symptoms

Severity Classification: - Mild: AHI 5-14 events/hour - Moderate: AHI 15-29 events/hour - Severe: AHI ≥30 events/hour

Neurological Risk Stratification: - Moderate-severe OSA (AHI ≥15) associated with 2-3 fold increased stroke risk - Nocturnal hypoxemia (SpO2 nadir <80%) associated with white matter disease and cognitive decline - OSA with atrial fibrillation: compound stroke risk requiring aggressive management - Comorbid epilepsy: untreated OSA increases seizure frequency by up to 2-fold

Screening Tools: - Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS): 0-10 normal; 11-14 mild; 15-17 moderate; 18-24 severe sleepiness - STOP-BANG Questionnaire: 0-2 low risk; 3-4 intermediate risk; 5-8 high risk for moderate-severe OSA


PRIORITY KEY: STAT = Immediate | URGENT = Within hours | ROUTINE = Standard | EXT = Extended/atypical cases | - = Not applicable to this setting


1. LABORATORY WORKUP

1A. Essential/Core Labs (All Patients)

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
CBC (CPT 85025) Screen for polycythemia secondary to chronic intermittent hypoxia; anemia contributing to fatigue Normal; elevated Hgb/Hct suggests chronic hypoxemia ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE STAT
CMP (CPT 80053) Renal/hepatic function; electrolytes; pre-treatment baseline; assess metabolic syndrome components Normal ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE STAT
TSH (CPT 84443) Hypothyroidism causes weight gain, upper airway edema, and fatigue that exacerbates OSA Normal ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
HbA1c (CPT 83036) Metabolic syndrome screening; OSA independently increases insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes risk <5.7% ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Fasting lipid panel (CPT 80061) Dyslipidemia screening for cerebrovascular risk stratification; OSA promotes atherogenic lipid profile LDL <100 mg/dL (or <70 if high vascular risk) - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
ESR/CRP Systemic inflammation marker; OSA-related chronic inflammation contributes to atherosclerosis and neurological injury Normal; elevated suggests high inflammatory burden - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

1B. Extended Workup (Second-line)

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
BNP / NT-proBNP Cardiac strain assessment; OSA-related pulmonary hypertension and right heart dysfunction; screen for heart failure contributing to central apneas BNP <100 pg/mL; NT-proBNP <300 pg/mL URGENT ROUTINE EXT STAT
Coagulation panel (PT/INR, PTT) Stroke risk assessment; baseline before anticoagulation if atrial fibrillation detected Normal URGENT ROUTINE EXT STAT
Homocysteine Elevated homocysteine is independent cerebrovascular risk factor; compounds OSA-related stroke risk <15 micromol/L - ROUTINE EXT -
Morning cortisol (8 AM) Assess HPA axis dysfunction from chronic sleep fragmentation; cortisol dysregulation contributes to metabolic syndrome 6-18 mcg/dL (AM) - ROUTINE EXT -

1C. Rare/Specialized

Test Rationale Target Finding ED HOSP OPD ICU
ABG (arterial blood gas) Obesity hypoventilation syndrome assessment when awake PaCO2 elevation suspected; chronic hypercapnia pH 7.35-7.45; PaCO2 35-45 mmHg; elevated PaCO2 suggests OHS STAT ROUTINE EXT STAT
Hypercoagulability panel (Factor V Leiden, prothrombin mutation, antiphospholipid antibodies, protein C/S, antithrombin III) Young stroke patient with OSA; evaluate for additional thrombophilic risk factors compounding OSA-related stroke risk Normal; positive results require hematology referral - EXT EXT -
Vitamin B12 / methylmalonic acid Screen for B12 deficiency contributing to cognitive impairment and neuropathy in OSA patients B12 >400 pg/mL; MMA <0.4 micromol/L - ROUTINE EXT -

2. DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING & STUDIES

2A. Essential/First-line

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
Polysomnography (PSG) (CPT 95810) Gold standard diagnostic study; in-lab attended study with EEG, EMG, ECG, airflow, respiratory effort, oximetry AHI calculation; severity classification; oxygen desaturation nadir and duration; assessment of sleep architecture disruption None - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Home sleep apnea test (HSAT) (CPT 95800) Alternative to PSG for uncomplicated patients without significant comorbidity; measures airflow, respiratory effort, oximetry AHI/REI ≥5 with symptoms or ≥15 without symptoms; may underestimate severity Suspected central apnea, hypoventilation, significant cardiopulmonary disease, neuromuscular disease; not valid if negative in high-pretest-probability patient - - ROUTINE -
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) Administer at initial evaluation and each follow-up to track treatment response ESS ≤10 (normal); ≥11 indicates pathological sleepiness requiring intervention None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
STOP-BANG Questionnaire Screening tool for undiagnosed OSA; administer to all patients with stroke, cognitive decline, refractory seizures, or morning headache Score ≥3 warrants formal sleep study; score ≥5 high probability of moderate-severe OSA None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -

2B. Extended

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
MRI brain with and without contrast (CPT 70553) If stroke symptoms, cognitive decline, or white matter disease suspected; assess for silent cerebral infarcts and leukoaraiosis White matter hyperintensities (leukoaraiosis); silent infarcts; hippocampal atrophy; no acute stroke Per MRI contraindications URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Carotid duplex ultrasound Cerebrovascular risk assessment; OSA promotes carotid intima-media thickening and plaque formation through intermittent hypoxia Normal intima-media thickness (<1.0 mm); no significant stenosis None - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
EEG (routine or prolonged) If seizure concern; OSA lowers seizure threshold; evaluate for nocturnal seizures mimicking or coexisting with OSA Normal background; no epileptiform discharges; distinguish from OSA-related arousals None ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Neurocognitive testing (CPT 96132) Formal assessment of OSA-related cognitive impairment; evaluate attention, executive function, memory, processing speed Baseline performance; identify deficits in attention, executive function, visuospatial processing, and memory None - - ROUTINE -

2C. Rare/Specialized

Study Timing Target Finding Contraindications ED HOSP OPD ICU
MRA head and neck Cerebrovascular assessment if stroke or TIA with OSA; evaluate for intracranial stenosis and vertebrobasilar disease Normal arterial anatomy; no significant stenosis or aneurysm Per MRI contraindications; renal function if gadolinium URGENT ROUTINE EXT -
Transthoracic echocardiography If pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure, or atrial fibrillation suspected; OSA is leading cause of secondary pulmonary hypertension Normal RV size/function; RVSP <35 mmHg; no atrial enlargement; assess for patent foramen ovale (paradoxical embolism risk) None - ROUTINE EXT -
Autonomic function testing (tilt table, QSART, cardiovagal testing) If autonomic neuropathy suspected; OSA causes sympathetic hyperactivation and parasympathetic withdrawal Normal autonomic reflexes; document sympathovagal imbalance severity None; defer if unstable - - EXT -

3. TREATMENT

3A. CPAP Optimization for Neurological Benefit

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
CPAP therapy (continuous positive airway pressure) Nasal/oronasal mask First-line OSA treatment with demonstrated neuroprotective benefit; reduces stroke risk 40-60% in compliant users; improves cognitive function; reduces seizure frequency in comorbid epilepsy N/A :: nasal/oronasal :: nightly :: Titrated to eliminate obstructive events per PSG or auto-CPAP algorithm; target AHI <5 on therapy; minimum 4 hours/night for clinical benefit; optimal ≥6 hours/night Inability to clear secretions; CSF leak; basilar skull fracture; severe bullous lung disease CPAP compliance data download every 1-3 months; residual AHI on device; mask leak; ESS improvement; blood pressure response - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Positional therapy (avoid supine sleep) Physical Adjunct for position-dependent OSA where AHI is ≥2x worse supine; reduces neurological impact of positional desaturation N/A :: - :: nightly :: Positional devices (tennis ball technique, commercial positional belts, or wedge pillows) to maintain lateral sleep position Inability to tolerate lateral position; musculoskeletal limitations Symptom response; repeat PSG or HSAT to confirm efficacy - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Sleep hygiene optimization - Consolidate nocturnal sleep; reduce OSA severity; improve CPAP tolerance N/A :: - :: daily :: Regular sleep-wake schedule; 7-9 hours nightly; cool dark room; elevate head of bed 30 degrees; avoid supine position; limit screen time before bed None Adherence; symptom response - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

3B. Neurological Comorbidity Management

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Modafinil (Provigil) PO Residual EDS despite compliant CPAP therapy (≥4 hours/night for ≥3 months); FDA-approved for residual sleepiness in OSA 100 mg :: PO :: daily :: Start 100 mg each morning; increase to 200 mg daily after 1-2 weeks if needed; max 200 mg/day for OSA-related EDS; take upon awakening Hypersensitivity; severe hepatic impairment; may reduce efficacy of hormonal contraceptives; verify CPAP compliance before prescribing Blood pressure; rash (rare Stevens-Johnson); sleep quality; CPAP compliance verification; contraceptive efficacy - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Acetazolamide PO Central apnea component; altitude-related OSA exacerbation; reduces AHI by increasing ventilatory drive through metabolic acidosis 250 mg :: PO :: BID :: Start 250 mg BID; may increase to 500 mg BID; reduces AHI by 40-50% in mixed/central apnea component; also useful for idiopathic intracranial hypertension comorbidity Sulfonamide allergy; severe hepatic or renal insufficiency; hyponatremia; hypokalemia; metabolic acidosis Electrolytes (K+, bicarb) at 1 week and monthly; renal function; paresthesias (common, benign); nephrolithiasis risk - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Topiramate (Topamax) PO Weight reduction and migraine prophylaxis in obese OSA patients with comorbid migraine; dual benefit of weight loss (reduces AHI) and headache prevention 25 mg :: PO :: QHS :: Start 25 mg at bedtime; titrate by 25 mg/week to target 50-100 mg BID; weight loss benefit typically requires ≥100 mg/day; max 200 mg/day Metabolic acidosis; nephrolithiasis history; pregnancy (teratogenic); acute narrow-angle glaucoma Serum bicarbonate; renal function; cognitive effects (word-finding difficulty); weight; kidney stones; intraocular pressure if eye symptoms - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

3C. Stroke Prevention in OSA

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Aspirin PO Cardiovascular risk reduction in moderate-severe OSA with vascular risk factors (hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, smoking); primary prevention when 10-year ASCVD risk ≥10% 81 mg :: PO :: daily :: 81 mg once daily; take with food; continue indefinitely unless contraindicated Active GI bleeding; aspirin allergy; severe thrombocytopenia; concurrent anticoagulation (relative); last trimester pregnancy GI symptoms; bleeding signs; platelet count if concern; concurrent NSAID use ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Atorvastatin (Lipitor) PO Dyslipidemia management with OSA-related vascular risk; statins provide pleiotropic anti-inflammatory benefit relevant to OSA-induced endothelial dysfunction 20 mg :: PO :: daily :: Start 20 mg daily; increase to 40 mg daily if LDL goal not met at 6 weeks; take in evening; high-intensity statin (40-80 mg) if ASCVD equivalent or prior stroke Active liver disease; pregnancy; breastfeeding; concurrent cyclosporine LFTs at baseline and 12 weeks; lipid panel at 6 weeks; CK if myalgia; assess diabetes risk - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Antihypertensive optimization PO Resistant hypertension commonly driven by untreated OSA; OSA is leading identifiable cause of resistant hypertension; CPAP reduces BP 2-10 mmHg N/A :: PO :: daily :: Optimize existing antihypertensive regimen; target BP <130/80 mmHg; CPAP adherence is critical adjunct; consider aldosterone antagonist (spironolactone) for resistant hypertension with OSA Per individual agent Blood pressure at each visit; home BP monitoring; electrolytes if on spironolactone; assess CPAP compliance as adjunct to pharmacotherapy STAT ROUTINE ROUTINE STAT

3D. Seizure Management with OSA

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
CPAP optimization for seizure control Nasal/oronasal mask Comorbid epilepsy with OSA; untreated OSA increases seizure frequency through sleep fragmentation and intermittent hypoxia; CPAP reduces seizure frequency by up to 50% N/A :: nasal/oronasal :: nightly :: Optimize CPAP compliance targeting ≥6 hours/night; seizure frequency reduction correlates with CPAP adherence; may allow AED dose reduction once OSA controlled Same as standard CPAP Seizure diary; CPAP compliance; AED levels; EEG if breakthrough seizures - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
AED selection guidance in OSA PO Avoid sedating AEDs that worsen OSA through respiratory depression, weight gain, and upper airway muscle relaxation N/A :: PO :: N/A :: AVOID: phenobarbital, benzodiazepines (clonazepam, clorazepate), pregabalin (weight gain, sedation); PREFER: levetiracetam, lamotrigine, lacosamide (weight-neutral, non-sedating); CAUTION: topiramate (weight loss beneficial but cognitive effects); valproate (weight gain worsens OSA) Per individual AED Seizure frequency; weight; sedation level; CPAP compliance; sleep quality; AED levels ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE

4. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

4A. Referrals & Consults

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
Sleep medicine referral for PSG/HSAT, CPAP titration, and ongoing compliance management; essential for all patients with confirmed or suspected OSA - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Neurology follow-up every 3-6 months for cognitive monitoring, stroke risk assessment, seizure management, and headache evaluation in OSA patients with neurological comorbidity - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Neuropsychology referral for formal neurocognitive testing if subjective cognitive decline, MoCA <26, or objective cognitive complaints affecting daily function; establishes baseline for CPAP treatment response - - ROUTINE -
Cardiology referral if atrial fibrillation detected, pulmonary hypertension suspected, or resistant hypertension despite optimal medical therapy and CPAP; OSA-related AF requires anticoagulation decision ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Endocrinology referral if HbA1c ≥6.5%, uncontrolled metabolic syndrome, or morbid obesity (BMI ≥40) for comprehensive metabolic management that complements OSA treatment - - ROUTINE -
Bariatric surgery evaluation for patients with BMI ≥35 with OSA-related comorbidities or BMI ≥40; weight loss surgery produces sustained AHI reduction and may cure OSA - - EXT -

4B. Patient/Family Instructions

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
OSA is a chronic neurological risk factor that significantly increases stroke risk (2-3 fold) and causes progressive cognitive decline if untreated; CPAP treatment reduces stroke risk by 40-60% ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Use CPAP every night for the entire sleep period; minimum 4 hours/night required for cardiovascular benefit; optimal benefit at ≥6 hours/night; even partial use is better than no use - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Report new neurological symptoms immediately: sudden weakness, speech difficulty, vision changes, severe headache, numbness, or new seizures (may indicate stroke or neurological complication of OSA) ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Do not drive if excessively sleepy; untreated OSA increases motor vehicle accident risk 2-7 fold; resume driving only after EDS is controlled with CPAP (ESS <11) ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Avoid alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime; alcohol relaxes upper airway muscles, worsens apneas, and increases nocturnal hypoxemia independently of body position ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Avoid sedating medications (benzodiazepines, opioids, sedating antihistamines, muscle relaxants) unless prescribed by a physician aware of OSA diagnosis; these worsen respiratory depression during sleep ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Bed partner observations are valuable; report witnessed apneas, gasping, choking, or unusual movements during sleep at each visit - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

4C. Lifestyle & Prevention

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
Weight management: 10% body weight loss produces approximately 26% AHI reduction; even modest weight loss (5-7%) improves oxygen desaturation and reduces cardiovascular risk - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Regular aerobic exercise: 150 minutes/week moderate-intensity exercise reduces AHI by 25% independent of weight loss; improves endothelial function and reduces inflammatory markers - - ROUTINE -
Sleep position training: avoid supine sleeping; lateral and prone positions reduce AHI by 50% or more in position-dependent OSA; elevate head of bed 30 degrees - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Smoking cessation: smoking increases upper airway inflammation, edema, and OSA severity; smoking is an independent stroke risk factor compounding OSA risk - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Limit caffeine to morning hours only to preserve sleep architecture; avoid caffeine after noon; caffeine does not substitute for CPAP therapy - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Nasal congestion management with nasal saline rinse and intranasal corticosteroid to improve CPAP tolerance and reduce oral breathing - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

5. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Alternative Diagnosis Key Distinguishing Features Tests to Differentiate
Central sleep apnea (CSA) Absent respiratory effort during apneic events; Cheyne-Stokes pattern in heart failure; no snoring during central events; may coexist with OSA (complex sleep apnea) PSG showing central events >50% of total AHI; absent respiratory effort on chest/abdomen belts
Narcolepsy Excessive daytime sleepiness with cataplexy; irresistible sleep attacks; sleep paralysis; hypnagogic hallucinations; no snoring or witnessed apneas as primary feature MSLT showing mean sleep latency ≤8 min with ≥2 SOREMPs; CSF orexin ≤110 pg/mL for type 1
Idiopathic hypersomnia Prolonged non-refreshing sleep; severe sleep inertia; excessive total sleep time (>11 hours); no respiratory events on PSG; no apneas PSG showing normal AHI; MSLT with mean latency ≤8 min but <2 SOREMPs
Medication-induced sedation Temporal relationship to sedating medication initiation; sleepiness without respiratory events; no snoring or witnessed apneas Medication review; PSG showing normal AHI; resolution with dose reduction
Nocturnal seizures Stereotyped motor events during sleep; postictal confusion; incontinence; tongue biting; may coexist with OSA Video-EEG monitoring; PSG with expanded EEG montage; epileptiform discharges
REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) Dream enactment behavior; vocalizations; violent limb movements during REM sleep; associated with alpha-synucleinopathies; no respiratory events PSG showing REM sleep without atonia; video documentation of dream enactment
Restless legs syndrome (RLS) Urge to move legs with uncomfortable sensations; worse at rest and evening; relief with movement; may fragment sleep causing EDS Clinical diagnosis (IRLSSG criteria); ferritin level; PSG may show periodic limb movements
Periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD) Repetitive stereotyped limb movements during sleep causing arousals; EDS from sleep fragmentation; no respiratory events PSG showing PLMS index >15/hour without OSA; distinguish from OSA-related arousals
Obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) Awake hypercapnia (PaCO2 >45 mmHg) in obese patient (BMI ≥30); daytime hypoxemia; often coexists with severe OSA ABG showing awake hypercapnia; serum bicarbonate >27 mEq/L; PSG with prolonged hypoxemia
Depression with hypersomnia Depressed mood; anhedonia; fatigue more than true sleepiness; psychomotor retardation; no respiratory events; may coexist with OSA PHQ-9; psychiatric evaluation; PSG showing normal AHI; sleepiness does not improve with CPAP

6. MONITORING PARAMETERS

Parameter Frequency Target/Threshold Action if Abnormal ED HOSP OPD ICU
CPAP compliance data (usage hours, AHI, mask leak) Every 1-3 months ≥4 hours/night on ≥70% of nights; residual AHI <5; acceptable mask leak Address barriers (mask fit, pressure intolerance, claustrophobia); consider auto-CPAP, bilevel, or oral appliance if CPAP intolerant - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) Each visit ESS ≤10 (normal range) Verify CPAP compliance; consider modafinil for residual EDS; evaluate for comorbid sleep disorder ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Cognitive screening (MoCA) Annually; more frequently if decline suspected MoCA ≥26/30 (normal) Formal neurocognitive testing; optimize CPAP; evaluate for concurrent neurodegenerative process - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Blood pressure Each visit; home monitoring <130/80 mmHg Optimize CPAP compliance (reduces BP 2-10 mmHg); adjust antihypertensives; evaluate for resistant hypertension STAT ROUTINE ROUTINE STAT
Stroke risk stratification (CHA2DS2-VASc if atrial fibrillation) At diagnosis; annually; with new AF CHA2DS2-VASc ≥2 (men) or ≥3 (women) warrants anticoagulation Initiate anticoagulation per guidelines; cardiology referral; aggressive CPAP compliance URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT
Seizure frequency (if comorbid epilepsy) Each visit; seizure diary ≥50% reduction from pre-CPAP baseline Optimize CPAP first before adjusting AEDs; ensure weight-neutral AED selection; repeat EEG - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Weight/BMI Every 3-6 months Stable or decreasing; 10% loss target Dietary counseling; exercise prescription; evaluate for bariatric surgery if BMI ≥35; adjust CPAP pressure after significant weight change - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Fasting lipid panel Annually LDL <100 mg/dL; <70 if ASCVD equivalent Initiate or intensify statin therapy; dietary modification - - ROUTINE -
HbA1c Annually; every 3-6 months if diabetic <5.7% (prevention); <7.0% (diabetic) Endocrinology referral; lifestyle modification; CPAP compliance improves insulin sensitivity - - ROUTINE -
CBC Annually Normal hemoglobin/hematocrit; no polycythemia Evaluate for persistent nocturnal hypoxemia if polycythemia; consider supplemental O2 with CPAP - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

7. DISPOSITION CRITERIA

Disposition Criteria
Outpatient management Majority of OSA patients; initial evaluation, CPAP initiation, cognitive monitoring, stroke risk management, and long-term follow-up
Home sleep study (HSAT) Uncomplicated patients with high pretest probability; no significant cardiopulmonary, neuromuscular, or central apnea suspicion; moderate-to-high STOP-BANG score
Admit for in-lab PSG Complex patients requiring attended study: suspected central apnea, concurrent seizure disorder requiring expanded EEG, neuromuscular disease, prior negative HSAT with high clinical suspicion
Admit to floor Acute ischemic stroke with known or newly diagnosed OSA; severe hypoxemia (SpO2 <85%) with neurological symptoms; obesity hypoventilation syndrome with encephalopathy; status epilepticus in patient with known OSA-epilepsy interaction
ICU admission Acute respiratory failure with hypercapnic encephalopathy; massive stroke with airway compromise; refractory status epilepticus with OSA; severe obesity hypoventilation with respiratory acidosis
Neurology referral Cognitive decline with OSA; new-onset seizures in OSA patient; stroke or TIA evaluation; headache evaluation (morning headache pattern); neuropathy/autonomic dysfunction assessment
Sleep medicine referral All patients for CPAP titration, compliance management, and long-term follow-up; evaluate for residual sleepiness; assess for comorbid sleep disorders
Follow-up frequency Every 2-4 weeks during CPAP initiation; every 1-3 months during first year; every 3-6 months once stable with annual neurocognitive screening

8. EVIDENCE & REFERENCES

Recommendation Evidence Level Source
OSA is an independent risk factor for ischemic stroke with 2-3 fold increased risk; dose-response relationship with AHI severity Class I, Prospective cohort (N=1022) Yaggi et al. N Engl J Med 2005
OSA causes significant neurocognitive impairment including deficits in attention, executive function, visuospatial processing, and memory Systematic review Lal et al. Chest 2012
CPAP treatment reduces fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events in severe OSA; untreated severe OSA has significantly higher cardiovascular mortality Class I, Prospective cohort (N=1651, 10-year follow-up) Marin et al. Lancet 2005
Untreated OSA worsens seizure control; CPAP treatment reduces seizure frequency in patients with comorbid epilepsy Class II, Prospective study Malow et al. Neurology 2008
OSA-related cognitive deficits are partially reversible with CPAP treatment; attention and executive function show most improvement; memory deficits may persist Meta-analysis Bucks et al. Sleep 2013
OSA prevalence has increased substantially; estimated 10-17% of adult men and 3-9% of adult women affected; prevalence increases with obesity epidemic Prospective population-based cohort (Wisconsin Sleep Cohort, 20-year follow-up) Peppard et al. Am J Epidemiol 2013
10% body weight loss produces 26% reduction in AHI; weight management is critical adjunct to CPAP therapy Class I, Prospective cohort Peppard et al. JAMA 2000
OSA is the most common identifiable cause of resistant hypertension; CPAP reduces blood pressure 2-10 mmHg in compliant users Meta-analysis, Level A Bazzano et al. JAMA 2007
AASM clinical practice guideline for diagnostic testing of OSA; PSG is gold standard; HSAT acceptable for uncomplicated patients Clinical practice guideline Kapur et al. J Clin Sleep Med 2017
Modafinil is effective for residual EDS in OSA patients adherent to CPAP; FDA-approved for this indication Class I, RCT Black et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2007
OSA is associated with increased prevalence of white matter hyperintensities and silent cerebral infarcts on MRI; severity correlates with AHI and hypoxemia burden Cross-sectional neuroimaging study Kim et al. Sleep 2013
CPAP treatment for 3 months improves white matter integrity and neurocognitive function in severe OSA; structural brain changes are partially reversible Prospective treatment study with DTI Castronovo et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2014

NOTES

  • OSA is the most common sleep-disordered breathing condition and a major modifiable neurological risk factor; prevalence is 10-17% in adult men and 3-9% in adult women
  • The neurological consequences of OSA are driven primarily by intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation, which cause oxidative stress, systemic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and sympathetic hyperactivation
  • Stroke risk in moderate-severe OSA is increased 2-3 fold independently of other vascular risk factors; this risk is substantially reduced with CPAP adherence
  • OSA-related cognitive impairment affects attention, executive function, visuospatial processing, and memory; deficits in attention and executive function are most reversible with CPAP treatment, while memory deficits may persist
  • Morning headache is present in up to 30% of OSA patients, often mimicking tension-type headache or chronic daily headache; resolves with effective CPAP therapy in most cases
  • OSA lowers seizure threshold through sleep fragmentation and hypoxemia; CPAP treatment reduces seizure frequency by up to 50% in comorbid epilepsy patients; optimize OSA treatment before escalating AEDs
  • Avoid sedating AEDs (phenobarbital, benzodiazepines, pregabalin) in epilepsy patients with OSA; prefer weight-neutral, non-sedating agents (levetiracetam, lamotrigine, lacosamide)
  • OSA is the leading identifiable cause of resistant hypertension; always screen hypertensive patients for OSA, especially if requiring ≥3 antihypertensive agents
  • CPAP compliance is the critical determinant of neurological benefit; minimum 4 hours/night required for cardiovascular benefit; optimal benefit at ≥6 hours/night
  • Atrial fibrillation prevalence is 4-5 fold higher in severe OSA; OSA-related AF has higher recurrence after cardioversion without CPAP; optimize OSA treatment before and after AF ablation
  • Weight management is a powerful adjunct: 10% weight loss reduces AHI by approximately 26% and may eliminate mild OSA
  • Obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) may coexist with severe OSA; suspect if awake hypercapnia (PaCO2 >45 mmHg) or serum bicarbonate >27 mEq/L; OHS requires bilevel PAP rather than CPAP alone
  • Autonomic dysfunction in OSA manifests as sympathetic hyperactivation, reduced heart rate variability, and impaired baroreceptor sensitivity; contributes to hypertension, cardiac arrhythmia, and sudden cardiac death risk
  • REM-predominant OSA (apneas predominantly in REM sleep) is more common in women and may be underestimated by overall AHI; associated with greater cardiovascular risk per event

CHANGE LOG

v1.0 (February 7, 2026) - Initial template creation - Neurological evaluation focus: stroke risk, cognitive impact, epilepsy interaction, headache, autonomic effects - Comprehensive laboratory workup including cerebrovascular risk assessment - Treatment sections organized by neurological indication: CPAP optimization, neurological comorbidity management, stroke prevention, seizure management - 10-column treatment tables with structured dosing format - Evidence section with PubMed-linked references - Differential diagnosis including central sleep apnea, narcolepsy, nocturnal seizures, RBD, and obesity hypoventilation