🌙 STOP-BANG Sleep Apnea Risk Calculator
Clinically-Validated OSA Screening • Get Results in 60 Seconds
STOP-BANG Assessment
Answer all 8 questions below to calculate your sleep apnea risk score
The STOP-BANG questionnaire is a validated medical screening tool used by doctors to identify patients at risk for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). This is NOT a diagnosis - only a sleep study can diagnose OSA.
Rate your chance of dozing in these situations: 0=Never, 1=Slight, 2=Moderate, 3=High
Complete the questionnaire and click Calculate to see your sleep apnea risk assessment
📊 Your Risk Assessment
📋 Home Sleep Test Kits
Get diagnosed from home with FDA-approved tests. Results in 3-5 days.
🏥 OSA Severity Calculator
Calculate the severity of your obstructive sleep apnea condition.
💤 Sleep Quality Assessment
Evaluate your overall sleep quality and identify improvement areas.
© 2025 SleepCalculators.Online | All Rights Reserved
Sleep Calculators Online Health Team – Our calculators are developed with guidance from board-certified sleep medicine physicians, pulmonologists, and respiratory therapists, following AASM and European Respiratory Society guidelines. The STOP-BANG questionnaire, created by Dr. Frances Chung, has been validated in studies involving over 10,000 patients.
Contributor: Shakeel Muzaffar supports the research, content organization, and user-friendly design of this calculator. His experience as a homoeopath and background in health education ensure a clear explanation and practical usability.
🌙 Complete Guide to STOP-BANG & Sleep Apnea
Everything you need to know about obstructive sleep apnea screening, diagnosis, and treatment
😴 What is Obstructive Sleep Apnea?
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a serious sleep disorder where breathing repeatedly stops and starts throughout the night. These breathing pauses, called apneas, occur when the muscles in the back of your throat relax too much, causing your airway to narrow or close completely.
Here's what happens during an apnea episode:
- Airway collapses: Throat muscles relax, tongue falls back, soft tissues block airflow
- Oxygen drops: Blood oxygen levels decrease (sometimes dangerously low)
- Brain wakes you: Your brain detects low oxygen and briefly wakes you to reopen the airway
- You gasp/snort: Breathing resumes with a loud snort or gasp
- Cycle repeats: This happens 5-100+ times per hour in severe cases
🔍 Understanding the STOP-BANG Questionnaire
The STOP-BANG questionnaire is a validated medical screening tool developed by anaesthesiologists to identify surgical patients at high risk for OSA. It's now widely used in primary care, sleep clinics, and public health screening because it's:
- Quick: Takes 60 seconds to complete
- Accurate: 84-96% sensitivity for detecting moderate-severe OSA
- Simple: Only requires 8 yes/no questions
- Free: Public domain tool (no copyright restrictions)
- Evidence-based: Validated in multiple clinical studies
Breaking Down Each STOP-BANG Component:
"Do you snore loudly (louder than talking or loud enough to be heard through closed doors)?"
Why It Matters: Loud snoring indicates airway obstruction. When air forces through a narrowed throat, it vibrates soft tissues, creating noise. The louder the snore, the more restricted the airway.
Key Point: Snoring loud enough to be heard through walls or from another room is particularly concerning.
"Do you often feel tired, fatigued, or sleepy during the daytime?"
Why It Matters: Fragmented sleep from repeated awakenings prevents deep sleep stages. You might spend 8 hours in bed but get only 4-5 hours of quality sleep.
Red Flags: Falling asleep during meetings, whilst driving, or during conversations despite adequate time in bed.
"Has anyone observed you stop breathing during your sleep?"
Why It Matters: This is perhaps the most specific indicator of OSA. A bed partner who witnesses breathing pauses, gasping, or choking sounds provides crucial diagnostic clues.
What They See: 10-30+ seconds of complete silence (breathing stopped), followed by a loud gasp or snort as breathing resumes.
"Do you have or are you being treated for high blood pressure?"
Why It Matters: OSA and hypertension are intimately linked. Repeated oxygen drops trigger sympathetic nervous system activation, releasing stress hormones that raise blood pressure.
Statistics: 50% of OSA patients have hypertension, and 30% of hypertension patients have OSA.
• B (BMI > 35): Excess weight, especially around the neck, narrows airways and increases OSA risk 4-5x
• A (Age > 50): Throat muscles naturally lose tone with age, increasing collapse risk
• N (Neck > 16"): Larger neck circumference = more soft tissue = more airway compression
• G (Gender - Male): Males have 2-3x higher risk due to fat distribution, airway anatomy, and hormonal factors
🌟 15 Fascinating Facts About Sleep Apnea
📊 How Risk Scores Work
| STOP-BANG Score | Risk Level | OSA Probability | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0-2 | Low Risk | <15% | Monitor symptoms; retest if changes occur |
| 3-4 | Moderate Risk | 30-50% | Discuss with doctor; consider sleep study |
| 5-8 | High Risk | 70-85% | Sleep study strongly recommended |
⚠️ Health Consequences of Untreated OSA
Obstructive sleep apnea isn't just about poor sleep—it's a serious medical condition with life-threatening complications:
- Hypertension: 50% of OSA patients develop high blood pressure
- Heart disease: 2-4x increased risk of coronary artery disease
- Heart failure: OSA worsens existing heart failure; can trigger new cases
- Arrhythmias: Atrial fibrillation risk increased 4x
- Stroke: 2-3x higher risk, especially in severe untreated OSA
- Type 2 diabetes: OSA impairs glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity
- Metabolic syndrome: Cluster of conditions (obesity, high BP, high cholesterol)
- Weight gain: Poor sleep disrupts hormones (leptin, ghrelin) that regulate appetite
- Memory problems: Chronic sleep deprivation damages hippocampus
- Cognitive decline: Accelerated ageing of the brain, increased dementia risk
- Depression & anxiety: 50-60% comorbidity with mood disorders
- Decreased productivity: Impaired concentration, decision-making, creativity
- Motor vehicle accidents: 7x higher crash risk due to drowsy driving
- Workplace injuries: Slower reaction times, impaired judgement
- Reduced quality of life: Relationship problems, decreased libido, social withdrawal
🏥 How Sleep Apnea is Diagnosed
A STOP-BANG score indicates risk, not diagnosis. Only a sleep study can definitively diagnose OSA and measure its severity.
Two Types of Sleep Studies:
- Where: Sleep lab/clinic with overnight stay
- Duration: Full night (7-8 hours)
- Monitoring: Brain waves (EEG), eye movements, muscle activity, heart rate, breathing, oxygen levels
- Cost: £1,000-3,000 (often covered by insurance)
- Best for: Complex cases, suspected central sleep apnea, movement disorders
- Where: Your own bed
- Duration: 1-3 nights
- Monitoring: Breathing patterns, oxygen levels, heart rate, snoring
- Cost: £150-500 (increasingly covered by insurance)
- Results: Analysed by sleep physician, results in 3-7 days
- Limitations: May underestimate severity
💊 Treatment Options for Sleep Apnea
CPAP therapy is highly effective, improving symptoms in 80-90% of patients. Benefits include better sleep quality, increased energy, reduced blood pressure, lower cardiovascular risk, and improved cognitive function.
Treatment Options (Click to Expand):
How it works: Delivers gentle air pressure through a mask, keeping your airway open all night.
- Effectiveness: 80-90% effective when used consistently
- Benefits appear within: Days to weeks—better sleep, more energy, lower BP
- Types of masks: Nasal, full-face, nasal pillows
- Modern features: Auto-adjusting pressure, heated humidifiers, whisper-quiet operation
Custom mouthpiece that repositions jaw/tongue
- Best for: Mild-moderate OSA, CPAP intolerant patients
- Effectiveness: 50-70% success rate (lower than CPAP)
- Pros: Portable, quiet, no electricity needed
- Cost: £1,500-3,000 for custom-fitted device
- Impact: 10% weight loss can reduce AHI by 25-30%
- Complete remission: Possible in 20% of patients who lose significant weight
- Mechanism: Reduces fat deposits around throat and improves muscle tone
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. About 20% of people with OSA don't snore loudly or consistently. Women are more likely to have "silent" OSA. Other symptoms include excessive daytime sleepiness, morning headaches, and difficulty concentrating.
Very dangerous. Untreated moderate-severe OSA increases your risk of heart attack, stroke, and sudden cardiac death. It's associated with a 3x higher mortality rate over 10-15 years.
Not necessarily. OSA is sometimes curable through significant weight loss, anatomical correction surgery, or lifestyle changes. However, many patients require lifelong CPAP. Modern machines are compact, quiet, and travel-friendly.
Timeline varies:
- Days 1-7: Better sleep quality, less daytime drowsiness
- Weeks 2-4: Improved mood, concentration, energy levels
- Months 1-3: Blood pressure reduction, cardiovascular improvements
- Months 3-12: Cognitive function restoration, weight loss becomes easier
🔗 Related Sleep Calculators
💤 Sleep Quality Calculator
Evaluate your overall sleep quality and identify improvement areas
⏰ Sleep Duration Calculator
Calculate optimal sleep duration for your age and lifestyle
📊 OSA Severity Calculator
Calculate the severity of your obstructive sleep apnea condition
😴 Insomnia Severity Calculator
Assess your insomnia severity using validated clinical tools
📅 Sleep Consistency Calculator
Track your sleep schedule consistency for better health
🌙 Ideal Bedtime Calculator
Find your perfect bedtime based on sleep cycles