For six years, he thought he was depressed. He was tired all the time. He could not concentrate at work. He had no energy for his family. He had tried two antidepressants, both of which helped a little, but neither of which made him feel really well. His wife had been complaining for years that his snoring was so loud it kept her awake. She also said that sometimes he seemed to stop breathing for several seconds, then gasp and start breathing again. She had mentioned this to their family doctor, who laughed and said all men snore. Nobody had connected the snoring to the depression. Nobody had suggested a sleep study. Nobody had told him that he might have a condition called obstructive sleep apnoea — and that treating it might transform his life in ways no antidepressant ever had.
If you have been fighting tiredness and low mood for years without clear improvement, please read this blog carefully. At Bharosa, we have seen many patients whose depression turned out to be powered by an undiagnosed sleep disorder. This is one of the most common and most missed connections in Indian mental health. Treating the sleep problem often changes everything.
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a condition in which a person's breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep because their airway collapses or becomes blocked. Each of these breathing pauses can last from a few seconds to over a minute, and they can happen dozens or even hundreds of times a night. The person usually does not remember these pauses, but their body experiences them as repeated mini-emergencies. Oxygen levels drop. The brain briefly wakes up to restart breathing. Deep sleep is disrupted. The person may sleep for eight hours but wake up feeling as though they have not slept at all.
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has established sleep apnoea as one of the most common and most undertreated medical conditions worldwide. It affects an estimated 1 billion people globally, with particularly high rates in countries with rising obesity rates — including India. The World Health Organization has identified sleep apnoea as a significant public health issue. Harvard Medical School has published extensive research on the links between sleep apnoea and mental health conditions, particularly depression.
Research has consistently shown that people with sleep apnoea are significantly more likely to have depression than people without it. The rates are high enough that major international guidelines now recommend screening for sleep apnoea in patients with depression that does not respond well to standard treatment. Similarly, patients with sleep apnoea should be screened for depression as part of their care.
The link works in both directions. Sleep apnoea causes depression through several mechanisms. It fragments sleep and prevents the deep, restorative sleep the brain needs. It produces repeated drops in oxygen that stress the brain and body. It causes chronic fatigue that leads to withdrawal, low motivation, and low mood. It increases inflammation, which is linked to depression. Over time, these effects can produce a clinical depression that looks identical to depression from other causes — except that it does not respond well to standard depression treatment unless the sleep apnoea is also addressed.
This is one of the most important points in this blog. If you have been treated for depression without full recovery, sleep apnoea might be the missing piece. Getting the sleep problem diagnosed and treated can transform the response to depression treatment — and in some cases, can eliminate the depression entirely.
Sleep apnoea is particularly common in people who are overweight or obese, though thin people can have it too. It is more common in men, but women also have it, particularly after menopause. It is more common with age, with a thick neck, with a small or recessed jaw, with a large tongue, with nasal blockage, and in smokers and drinkers. Family history also plays a role. In India, rising obesity rates have made sleep apnoea increasingly common, but awareness remains low.
The classic symptoms include loud snoring, witnessed breathing pauses during sleep (usually noticed by a partner), choking or gasping awakenings, morning headaches, dry mouth, non-refreshing sleep, daytime sleepiness, difficulty concentrating, irritability, and — as we have discussed — low mood and depression. Not every person with sleep apnoea has all of these symptoms. Some have only a few. Some have none of the classic sleep symptoms and present mainly with mood problems. This is why screening is so important.
Sleep apnoea is diagnosed with a sleep study. The standard test is an overnight polysomnography done in a sleep lab, which records brain activity, breathing, heart rate, oxygen levels, and body movements during sleep. A simpler home sleep test is available for many patients and can be done in the comfort of your own bed. Your psychiatrist or physician can arrange a sleep study if there is suspicion of sleep apnoea.
If sleep apnoea is confirmed, the severity is measured by how many breathing disruptions occur per hour of sleep. Mild, moderate, and severe categories guide treatment decisions. The treatment approach depends on the severity and the specific causes in each person.
The most effective and widely used treatment for moderate to severe sleep apnoea is continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy. This involves wearing a small mask connected to a machine that gently blows air into the airway, keeping it open during sleep. CPAP is highly effective when used consistently, and patients often describe the first good night of sleep on CPAP as life-changing. Within weeks, many patients feel less tired, think more clearly, and experience significant improvement in mood.
Other treatment options include weight loss (which can significantly reduce or even eliminate mild to moderate sleep apnoea in overweight patients), positional therapy (avoiding sleeping on the back, which makes apnoea worse in some people), oral appliances (mouth devices that keep the airway open for milder cases), and in selected cases, surgery to correct anatomical problems.
When sleep apnoea and depression are both present, treating both together is essential. Antidepressants may still be needed, but they work much better when the underlying sleep disorder is also being addressed. Many patients find that once their sleep is restored, they need less antidepressant medication, or sometimes none at all.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists routinely consider sleep-related factors when assessing depression, particularly in patients who have not responded fully to standard treatment. Where sleep apnoea is suspected, we refer for a sleep study and coordinate with sleep medicine specialists for diagnosis and CPAP treatment where indicated.
We treat the depression itself with evidence-based approaches — appropriate medication, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, and supportive care — while also making sure the sleep problem is being addressed in parallel. This integrated approach often produces outcomes that either treatment alone could never achieve.
What our patients most commonly tell us after a few months of combined treatment is that they feel properly rested for the first time in years. The depression lifts in a way that feels fundamentally different from earlier attempts at treatment. Their energy returns. Their interest in life returns. They begin to enjoy things again. This is what happens when the hidden sleep problem behind depression is finally found and treated. If you have been fighting depression that will not quite go away, please ask your psychiatrist about sleep apnoea. It might be the missing piece.
Q: Can sleep apnoea really cause depression?
A: Yes. Research has clearly established a strong link in both directions.
Q: Do I need a sleep study?
A: If you snore loudly, feel exhausted despite enough sleep, or have treatment-resistant depression, yes.
Q: Is CPAP uncomfortable?
A: It takes some adjustment but most patients adapt within a few weeks. The benefits are usually dramatic.
Q: Will treating sleep apnoea cure my depression?
A: It may significantly improve it, especially if apnoea has been a major driver. Both conditions often need attention.
Q: Does Bharosa assess sleep and mental health together in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Integrated care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
Your depression may have a hidden cause you can fix. Bharosa looks for it in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.