ModuleDraft

Sleep apnea after stroke (why it matters + how to talk to your clinician)

A patient-friendly overview of sleep apnea, common signs, and how to bring it up in follow-ups—focused on stroke risk and recovery (no diagnosis).

Secondary PreventionCaregiver, SurvivorIntro12 minPlain (6–8)

Educational only

Educational only — only a clinician can diagnose sleep apnea. Follow your care plan.

Get help now

If you have new sudden stroke symptoms, call emergency services immediately.

Key takeaways

  • Recognize common sleep apnea signs and why they matter after stroke
  • Prepare a clear script to ask about testing
  • Know what information to bring (snoring, daytime sleepiness, witnessed pauses)

What sleep apnea is

  • Breathing pauses during sleep
  • Can lower oxygen and fragment sleep

Why it matters after stroke

  • May raise cardiovascular risk
  • Can worsen fatigue and mood
  • May affect blood pressure control

Signs to notice

  • Loud snoring
  • Gasping/choking at night
  • Morning headaches
  • Daytime sleepiness

What to ask

  • Ask if testing is appropriate
  • Ask what treatment options exist

Practice check

What you’ll practice

These questions are untimed. After you answer all of them, you’ll see your score and a clear next lesson or reference step.

0 of 2 answered

Question 1

1. A common sleep apnea sign is…

Question 2

2. Sleep problems can affect daytime energy and recovery.

References

  1. Tier 4
    NHLBI: Sleep apnea (overview)
  2. Tier 1
    AHA/ASA 2021 Secondary Prevention Guideline (risk factor management themes)