Headaches in the morning that fade as the day goes on aren’t normal. They’re a signal that something happened during the night — and one of the most common, most under-diagnosed causes is sleep apnea.
Here’s why the connection exists, who it affects, and how to fix it. From our sleep dentistry team in Dansville.
The pattern that points to sleep apnea
- You wake up with a dull, throbbing, or tight headache
- It’s worse in the first 30-60 minutes after waking
- It improves over the morning as you become more active
- It’s often accompanied by feeling unrested even after a full night’s sleep
- Pain meds help but the headache returns the next morning
If two or more of these match, sleep apnea is on the short list.
Why apnea causes morning headaches
Two main mechanisms are at work:
1. Carbon dioxide buildup
When you stop breathing repeatedly during the night, oxygen levels drop and CO2 builds up. High CO2 causes blood vessels in the brain to dilate, which causes pain. By morning, your brain has been through hundreds of these cycles.
2. Disrupted sleep architecture
Each apnea event briefly wakes the brain, fragmenting sleep into hundreds of short sections instead of natural, long sleep cycles. The result is poor-quality sleep that leaves your brain inflamed and unrested — even if you spent 8 hours in bed.
Other common causes — and how to differentiate
Nighttime grinding
Bruxism causes morning headaches too — but they tend to be muscular (temple pain, jaw soreness) rather than the dull whole-head pressure of apnea-related headaches. Often both are happening at once.
Caffeine withdrawal
If you skip your usual morning coffee and the headache resolves with caffeine, that’s the cause.
Dehydration
If your headache resolves quickly with hydration, this might be it.
Medication side effects
Some blood pressure medications, statins, and others can cause morning headaches. Worth reviewing with your doctor.
Sleep position or pillow
An old or wrong-firmness pillow can cause neck-tension headaches. Easy to test by replacing.
Other clues that point to sleep apnea
- Loud, disruptive snoring
- Bed partner reports gasping, choking, or pauses in breathing
- Persistent daytime fatigue regardless of hours slept
- Falling asleep during meetings, while reading, or watching TV
- Frequent nighttime urination
- Morning dry mouth or sore throat
- Brain fog, irritability, or difficulty concentrating
- Decreased libido
What to do
1. Talk to your doctor
Bring up the morning headache pattern specifically. Ask about sleep apnea screening. Most primary care doctors can order a home sleep test.
2. Get a home sleep test
The diagnostic standard. You wear a simple device for 1-3 nights at home. Most insurance plans cover it. Results within a week.
3. Discuss treatment options
If diagnosed, you’ll have options including CPAP, custom oral appliance therapy, and lifestyle changes. The right choice depends on apnea severity and your tolerance for different approaches.
The good news
Once apnea is treated effectively, morning headaches often resolve within weeks. Patients consistently describe waking up feeling rested for the first time in years. The downstream effects on energy, mood, and concentration are often dramatic.
If your spouse is the snorer
Wake them and read this article together. Bed partners are the most reliable witnesses to sleep apnea — they hear the breathing pauses, see the gasping, watch the restlessness. Their observation is often what gets the right diagnosis started.
To learn more about oral appliance therapy and how we work with sleep physicians, contact A Smile By Design at (585) 335-2120.