10 Ways Sleep Apnea Can Be Harmful to Your Health

10 Ways Sleep Apnea Can Be Harmful to Your Health

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Adequate sleep means quality sleep, not just quantity, says Raj Dasgupta, MD, a pulmonary critical care and sleep medicine specialist at Huntington Health, a Cedars-Sinai affiliate, in Pasadena, California. “Someone may be getting seven to eight hours of sleep but still feel tired, because they’re not going into deep sleep,” he says. “We all need deep sleep and REM sleep to rejuvenate.”
1. Sleep Apnea May Harm Your Heart Health
Sleep apnea also reduces oxygen levels in the blood, limiting the supply that goes to vital organs, he notes. Your heart, like your other organs, needs oxygen to function properly.
“This reduced oxygen triggers inflammation that can harm blood vessels and the heart, contributing to conditions like atherosclerosis (plaque buildup) and cardiovascular disease,” Dasgupta says.
2. Sleep Apnea May Increase Stroke Risk (and Vice Versa)
3. Sleep Apnea May Cause Weight Gain
Plus, Dasgupta says, when you don’t get enough sleep, your body doesn’t produce enough leptin, an appetite-regulating hormone that helps reduce hunger. The lower the leptin levels, the harder it is to control appetite and lose weight, he explains.
4. Sleep Apnea Increases the Risk of High Blood Pressure
If you have sleep apnea and high blood pressure, it’s important to talk to your healthcare provider to make sure the sleep condition is treated. Treatment of sleep apnea is an important part of managing hypertension.
5. Sleep Apnea Raises Type 2 Diabetes Risk
6. Sleep Apnea Increases the Risk of Metabolic Syndrome
- Abnormal cholesterol levels
- High blood pressure
- High blood sugar
- High fasting blood sugar (a test done after not eating anything for at least eight hours)
- Increased waist size or excess abdominal fat
7. Sleep Apnea Can Affect Your Brain
Plus, sleep apnea can hurt your head — literally. Because sleep apnea limits the amount of oxygen that goes to the brain, you can wake up with a headache, Dasgupta says.
8. Sleep Apnea Is Linked to Depression and Anxiety
9. Sleep Apnea Increases the Risk of Glaucoma
10. Sleep Apnea Raises the Risk of Accidents
If you suspect you have sleep apnea, it’s important to be treated as soon as possible. If you’ve been diagnosed with sleep apnea but continue to experience symptoms, such as excessive daytime sleepiness, talk to your doctor about whether you should try a new treatment.
The good news is that sleep apnea can be treated, which reduces the related health risks, Dasgupta says. Some people may be reluctant to go see a doctor and have a sleep study done, assuming they’ll be hooked up to monitors and machines at a sleep center, he says. But the diagnosis process is much easier than it was in decades past.
“Today, a sleep study is not the Frankenstein’s monster, with tubes coming out, [that] you might picture,” Dasgupta says. “You can do a home sleep study in your own bed.”
The Takeaway
- Obstructive sleep apnea causes repeated pauses in breathing during sleep, preventing deep, restorative rest and increasing the risks for serious health conditions such as heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome.
- Uncontrolled sleep apnea can contribute to anxiety, cognitive decline, depression, glaucoma, and weight gain and even raise the likelihood of accidents due to excessive daytime sleepiness.
- Effective treatments, such as CPAP therapy, can reduce many of these risks, helping improve both sleep quality and overall health.
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Chester Wu, MD
Medical Reviewer
Chester Wu, MD, is double board-certified in psychiatry and sleep medicine. He cares for patients through his private practice in Houston, where he provides evaluations, medication management, and therapy for psychiatric and sleep medicine conditions.
After training at the Baylor College of Medicine and Stanford University School of Medicine, Dr. Wu established the first sleep medicine program within a psychiatric system in the United States while at the Menninger Clinic in Houston.

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