Sleep Apnea · Snoring
Snoring is a sound. Sleep apnea is a medical condition involving repeated breathing interruptions. Some people snore without having sleep apnea. Many people with sleep apnea snore. The only way to tell them apart is a sleep study — and that begins with your doctor, not your dentist.
If snoring is disrupting your sleep or your partner's — talk to your physician first
Already diagnosed? Schedule a consult →Medical note
This page is educational. We cannot determine from snoring alone whether you have sleep apnea — and neither can you. Obstructive sleep apnea requires a physician-ordered sleep study for diagnosis. If you are concerned about snoring, please speak with your primary care doctor.
Snoring occurs when soft tissue in the upper airway — the soft palate, uvula, tongue base, or throat walls — vibrates as air passes through a narrowed passage during sleep. Virtually everyone snores occasionally. Habitual, loud snoring is more significant — but it is still a symptom, not a diagnosis.
Primary snoring (also called simple or benign snoring) is snoring without associated breathing interruptions. Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) is below 5 on a sleep study. It does not carry the same cardiovascular and metabolic risks as OSA. It can still disrupt partners and affect relationships — but the treatment conversation is different.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) involves repeated episodes of partial or complete airway collapse during sleep, each causing oxygen desaturation and a brief arousal. OSA is associated with increased risk for hypertension, atrial fibrillation, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and motor vehicle accidents. It requires medical treatment — and it usually involves snoring, but snoring alone is not a reliable indicator of severity.
Not every snorer needs a sleep study — but certain features raise the probability of OSA enough to warrant evaluation. Talk to your doctor if any of the following apply:
No questionnaire or symptom checklist diagnoses sleep apnea. Only a physician-ordered sleep study with AHI measurement does. If you score high on a validated screening tool like STOP-BANG (≥ 3 points = high risk), discuss it with your doctor.
These are supportive measures with evidence behind them. They do not replace medical evaluation if OSA is suspected — but for primary snoring or as an adjunct to OSA treatment, they are worth implementing.
Weight reduction
Even modest weight loss (5–10% of body weight) can reduce OSA severity and snoring in overweight patients, by decreasing fat deposition around the pharynx. Source: AASM clinical practice guidelines.
Positional therapy
Sleeping on your side rather than your back reduces gravitational collapse of the tongue and soft palate. Positional OSA (AHI supine ≥ 2× non-supine) responds particularly well to positional devices.
Alcohol and sedative reduction
Alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime relaxes pharyngeal dilator muscles, worsening both snoring and apnea. Benzodiazepines and non-benzo sleep aids have a similar effect.
Nasal congestion management
Nasal obstruction promotes mouth breathing and oropharyngeal snoring. Treating allergic rhinitis, using nasal strips, or addressing a deviated septum can reduce snoring and improve CPAP tolerance.
This distinction matters for your wallet. Insurance coverage differs significantly based on whether there is a confirmed OSA diagnosis:
Confirmed OSA (AHI ≥ 5 with symptoms, or ≥ 15)
Oral appliance therapy (HCPCS E0486) is covered by most major medical insurers and Medicare Part B DME benefit with a physician prescription and letter of medical necessity. Sleep studies are also covered.
Primary snoring only (AHI < 5, no OSA)
Oral appliances for snoring alone are generally not covered by medical or dental insurance and are considered cosmetic. Out-of-pocket cost applies. A sleep study to confirm the primary-snoring diagnosis may or may not be covered — check with your insurer.
We verify before fabricating
We will not begin fabrication without confirming your coverage and your out-of-pocket responsibility. No surprises.
Source: CMS Medicare Benefit Policy Manual Chapter 15 (DME, E0486 coverage criteria); AADSM Treatment Protocol 2024; HCPCS E0486 coverage rationale.
Describe snoring patterns, daytime symptoms, and any bed-partner observations of witnessed apneas. Ask about an OSA risk assessment (STOP-BANG or Epworth Sleepiness Scale) and a sleep study referral if indicated.
A home sleep test or in-lab polysomnography confirms or rules out OSA. The AHI score determines whether you have primary snoring or OSA — and which treatment pathway applies.
Your physician discusses results. If OSA is confirmed, OAT may be prescribed. If primary snoring only, your physician discusses whether an oral appliance is still appropriate for quality-of-life reasons and what cost to expect.
Bring your sleep study report and physician guidance. We screen your dental anatomy, explain the appliance options, and provide a cost estimate — with or without insurance involvement depending on your diagnosis.
Custom appliance fabricated and fitted. Follow-up visits confirm comfort, efficacy, and bite health. For OSA patients, a follow-up sleep study is needed. For primary snoring, follow-up is less structured but still recommended at 3 and 12 months.
Daily brushing with soft brush and mild soap. Weekly enzyme-tablet soak. Store in vented case. No hot water. Inspect monthly for cracks or fit changes. Most appliances last 3–5 years. Full care details on the oral appliance page →
Common Questions
Clear answers about the overlap between snoring and OSA — and what to do about each.
Related topics
If you've already been evaluated by a physician, we're ready to help. Request a free consultation or call the office — no pressure, just answers.
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