Skip to main content
Oral Appliance Therapy for Sleep Apnea Richmond TX | Best Dental
Dr. Jasmine & Dr. Sonny Naderi · Richmond, TX

Oral Appliance Therapy for
Sleep Apnea in Richmond, TX

Custom FDA-approved dental devices that keep your airway open during sleep — a proven CPAP alternative for patients with mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea. No mask, no machine, no noise.

FDA Approved Treatment
67% AHI Improvement (Moderate OSA)
2–3 Wks Custom Device Fabrication
Medicare & Most Insurance Accepted
Schedule Sleep Apnea Consultation

What Is Sleep Apnea?

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a condition in which the soft tissues at the back of the throat — the tongue, soft palate, and throat muscles — repeatedly collapse during sleep, partially or completely blocking the airway. Each collapse causes a pause in breathing that can last from a few seconds to over a minute. The brain detects the oxygen drop, triggers a brief awakening to restore breathing, and the cycle repeats — sometimes hundreds of times per night.

Most people with sleep apnea are entirely unaware this is happening. Their bed partner hears the snoring and gasping. They wake up feeling exhausted despite a full night in bed. They struggle with daytime drowsiness, morning headaches, difficulty concentrating, and irritability — symptoms commonly attributed to stress or aging rather than a treatable medical condition.

The consequences of untreated sleep apnea extend well beyond fatigue. Repeated oxygen desaturations night after night place significant strain on the cardiovascular system, raising the risk of hypertension, heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes. OSA is also independently associated with increased risk of motor vehicle accidents due to daytime drowsiness. It is not a benign inconvenience — it is a serious medical condition that responds well to treatment when properly diagnosed.

"Overall, the apnea-hypopnea index improved by 48% in mild, 67% in moderate, and 62% in severe OSA… Oral appliances are the recommended first-line option for mild-to-moderate obstructive sleep apnea."
Liao, Shi, Gao, Zhang, Li, Xu & Han — Department of Sleep Medical Center, Beijing Tongren Hospital & Obstructive Sleep Apnea Clinical Diagnosis and Therapy Research Centre, Capital Medical University. 2024 meta-analysis of 42 studies with 2,265 patients evaluating oral appliance efficacy across all OSA severity levels. Published in Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery (Wiley/AAO-HNS). View study on PubMed (NIH) →

This 2024 meta-analysis — published in the official journal of the American Academy of Otolaryngology — confirms that oral appliances significantly reduce breathing disruptions across all severity levels of obstructive sleep apnea. For patients with mild to moderate OSA, oral appliance therapy is recommended as a first-line treatment option by both the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the American Academy of Dental Sleep Medicine.

The Connection Between Dentistry and Sleep Apnea

Obstructive sleep apnea is fundamentally a structural problem — the airway collapses because of the position and muscle tone of the jaw, tongue, and throat tissues during sleep. Dentists are the specialists most qualified to work with the teeth, jaw, and oral structures that determine airway dimensions. During routine exams, dentists frequently observe signs pointing toward undiagnosed sleep apnea — worn tooth enamel from nighttime grinding, scalloped tongue edges, a narrow palate, or a recessed jawline. If you've been told you grind your teeth, sleep apnea may be a contributing factor.

Dentists trained in dental sleep medicine work in collaboration with sleep physicians — not in place of them. The sleep physician diagnoses OSA through a sleep study and determines whether oral appliance therapy is medically appropriate. The dentist then evaluates oral health and bite, selects the appropriate device, fabricates the custom appliance, and monitors treatment outcomes over time.

Warning Signs of Sleep Apnea

Many patients live with undiagnosed sleep apnea for years. If you recognize multiple signs below, a sleep study can provide answers — and treatment can be life-changing.

🔊
Loud, Chronic Snoring

Especially snoring punctuated by pauses and gasping sounds reported by a bed partner.

😴
Waking Unrefreshed

Feeling exhausted even after 7–8 hours of sleep. Never feeling truly rested.

🤕
Morning Headaches

Caused by repeated overnight oxygen desaturation — often misattributed to other causes.

💤
Excessive Daytime Sleepiness

Falling asleep easily during the day, difficulty staying alert during meetings or driving.

🧠
Concentration & Memory Issues

Brain fog, forgetfulness, and difficulty focusing — caused by fragmented, oxygen-depleted sleep.

🦷
Nighttime Teeth Grinding

Bruxism is strongly associated with OSA. Your dentist may spot this before you notice symptoms.

⏸️
Witnessed Breathing Pauses

A bed partner observes you stop breathing during sleep — the hallmark sign of sleep apnea.

🚽
Frequent Nighttime Urination

A lesser-known but well-documented symptom — nocturia affects many untreated OSA patients.

How Oral Appliance Therapy Works

Oral appliance therapy uses a custom-fitted dental device worn during sleep — similar in appearance to a sports mouthguard or retainer, but specifically engineered to maintain airway patency throughout the night. The device holds the lower jaw (mandible) in a slightly forward and downward position, which advances the tongue and soft throat tissues away from the airway and increases pharyngeal muscle tone to reduce collapse.

The degree of jaw advancement is adjustable — modern devices allow millimeter-by-millimeter titration until the optimal therapeutic position is found. This process occurs over several weeks, guided by symptom improvement and follow-up sleep testing to confirm the device is reducing apnea events to therapeutic levels.

This is not a boutique or experimental treatment. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) and the American Academy of Dental Sleep Medicine (AADSM) include oral appliance therapy in their clinical practice guidelines as a first-line treatment for mild to moderate OSA and as an accepted alternative for patients who cannot tolerate CPAP.

Types of Oral Appliances

Dr. Naderi selects the optimal device type based on your anatomy, jaw function, dental condition, and sleep study results.

Most Common

Mandibular Advancement Device (MAD)

Advances the lower jaw forward to open the airway
Two-piece design with calibrated adjustment mechanism
Millimeter-by-millimeter titration for optimal position
Requires at least 6–8 teeth per arch to anchor the device
Examples: SomnoDent, Herbst Appliance, EMA, ProSomnus
First-line recommendation for most OSA patients
Alternative Option

Tongue Retaining Device (TRD)

Holds the tongue forward using a small suction bulb
Does not advance the jaw — works on tongue position only
Used when a MAD is not appropriate due to dental or TMJ concerns
Option for patients with fewer teeth or complete dentures
Less commonly prescribed than MADs
Often requires longer adaptation period

⚠️ Over-the-Counter "Boil and Bite" Devices Are Not the Same

Generic snoring mouthpieces sold online or at pharmacies are not FDA-cleared for treating sleep apnea. They cannot be properly titrated, do not provide calibrated jaw advancement, and can cause bite problems or TMJ issues. A custom oral appliance fabricated by a qualified dentist is a medical device — prescribed, fitted, and monitored just like any other medical treatment.

Oral Appliance vs CPAP

CPAP remains the gold standard for severe OSA — but compliance is the central problem. An unused CPAP machine treats no one. Here's an honest comparison.

Factor
Oral Appliance
CPAP
Comfort
Small, no mask, no hose
Mask and machine — takes adjustment
Compliance Rates
Consistently higher long-term use
30–50% stop using within 1 year
Mild/Moderate OSA
Comparable effectiveness to CPAP
Highly effective
Severe OSA
Effective; CPAP preferred if tolerated
Gold standard
Travel
Fits in a small case, no power needed
Bulky machine, requires power source
Sleep Positions
Unrestricted — sleep in any position
Mask can limit certain positions
Noise
Completely silent
Machine noise (varies by model)
Insurance
Medical & dental; Medicare covered
Medical insurance covered

The clinical research is clear: for patients with mild to moderate OSA, oral appliance therapy is comparably effective to CPAP in improving sleep quality, daytime function, and cardiovascular outcomes. For patients with severe OSA who cannot tolerate CPAP, oral appliances provide meaningfully better outcomes than no treatment at all — and better real-world effectiveness than a CPAP device that sits unused on the nightstand.

Who Is a Good Candidate?

Oral appliance therapy is not appropriate for every patient. A proper evaluation with Dr. Naderi determines whether this treatment is right for you.

✅ Good Candidates

Adults with diagnosed mild to moderate OSA (AHI 5–30 events/hour)
Adults with severe OSA who are CPAP intolerant (documented inability to comply)
Primary snorers — snoring without significant apnea events
Patients with sufficient healthy teeth (at least 6–8 per arch)
Patients without severe active TMJ disorder
Frequent travelers who need a portable solution

⚠️ Not Appropriate For

Central sleep apnea (CSA) — a neurological, not mechanical, condition
Complete edentulism (no teeth) — insufficient anchorage for MAD devices
Severe uncontrolled periodontal disease
Severe active TMJ disorder (requires evaluation first)
Certain jaw or bite conditions — evaluated on case-by-case basis
Patients who have not completed a formal sleep study

The Oral Appliance Process

From diagnosis to a custom-fitted device, the process is straightforward. Dr. Naderi coordinates with your sleep physician at every stage.

1

Sleep Study & Diagnosis

Physician-ordered
In-lab polysomnography (PSG) or home sleep apnea test (HSAT) ordered by your physician
Measures apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) and oxygen saturation levels
Establishes diagnosis, severity, and guides treatment selection
Required before any oral appliance can be prescribed — symptoms alone are not sufficient
2

Dental Evaluation at Best Dental

45–60 minutes
Comprehensive exam of teeth, gums, bite, jaw joints, and airway anatomy
Determine candidacy and select the most appropriate device type
Review sleep study results and coordinate with your sleep physician
Insurance verification and cost estimate provided before treatment begins
3

Digital Impressions & Records

20–30 minutes
iTero digital impressions — no putty, no gagging
Bite relationship and jaw measurements recorded for the lab
Records sent to a specialized dental sleep laboratory for fabrication
4

Custom Device Fabrication

2–3 weeks
Specialized dental sleep lab crafts your custom appliance to precise specifications
Not an off-the-shelf boil-and-bite — a calibrated clinical medical device
Quality-checked before delivery to our Richmond office
5

Fitting & Delivery

30–45 minutes
Device fitted, comfort verified, and initial jaw position set (starts conservatively)
Instructions for insertion, removal, cleaning, and the adjustment mechanism
Morning jaw exercises demonstrated to minimize any initial stiffness
6

Titration & Follow-Up

Several weeks
Gradually advance the appliance to find the optimal therapeutic jaw position
Follow-up visits to assess progress, address discomfort, and make adjustments
Follow-up sleep study recommended to confirm the device is treating your OSA effectively
7

Ongoing Monitoring

Annual visits
Regular check of teeth, gums, bite, and jaw joints for any changes over time
Weight changes or aging can affect OSA severity — periodic sleep testing may be recommended
Device condition evaluated and replaced when necessary (typically every 3–5 years)

Cost & Insurance

Because sleep apnea is a medical condition, oral appliance therapy is typically billed to medical insurance — not dental insurance. Most plans cover it with a formal diagnosis.

Custom mandibular advancement device (MAD) $1,800–$3,500
Includes: device, fitting, follow-up adjustments Bundled
Follow-up sleep study (to verify efficacy) Varies by provider
Device replacement (typically every 3–5 years) $1,800–$3,500
Most major medical insurance plans — including Medicare Part B — cover custom oral appliances for diagnosed OSA with physician referral
Coverage requires formal sleep study diagnosis, physician referral, and documentation of medical necessity
HSA and FSA funds can be applied to any out-of-pocket costs
We accept Delta Dental, Aetna, Cigna, BCBS, Guardian, MetLife, UnitedHealthcare, Medicare · CareCredit and Cherry financing available

💡 The cost of not treating sleep apnea: Untreated OSA significantly increases the risk of hypertension, heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and motor vehicle accidents. The downstream medical costs of these conditions — hospitalizations, medications, lost productivity — dwarf the one-time cost of an oral appliance. Treatment is an investment in your health, safety, and quality of life.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a dentist treat sleep apnea in Richmond, TX?
Yes. At Best Dental in Richmond, TX (22377 Bellaire Blvd, Suite 400, 77407), Dr. Jasmine Naderi and Dr. Sonny Naderi provide oral appliance therapy — a custom FDA-approved dental device that repositions the jaw to keep the airway open during sleep. This is a recognized treatment for mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea and for CPAP-intolerant patients. A physician-ordered sleep study diagnosis is required before treatment. Call (281) 215-3065 to schedule a consultation.
What is oral appliance therapy for sleep apnea?
Oral appliance therapy (OAT) uses a custom-fitted dental device worn during sleep to treat obstructive sleep apnea. The device — similar in appearance to a nightguard or retainer — works by advancing the lower jaw forward, which prevents the soft tissues at the back of the throat from collapsing and blocking the airway. This keeps the airway open throughout the night, reducing or eliminating apnea events, snoring, and the oxygen desaturations that make sleep apnea medically dangerous.
Is oral appliance therapy as effective as CPAP?
For mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea, oral appliance therapy is clinically proven to be comparably effective to CPAP in reducing apnea events and improving sleep quality. For severe sleep apnea, CPAP provides stronger airway support and is generally the first-line recommendation — but oral appliances are an accepted alternative for patients who cannot tolerate CPAP. Studies consistently show that patients who cannot comply with CPAP have significantly better outcomes using an oral appliance they actually wear, compared to a CPAP machine they stop using.
How much does a sleep apnea oral appliance cost?
Custom sleep apnea oral appliances typically cost between $1,800 and $3,500, including the device, fitting, and follow-up adjustments. Most medical insurance plans — including Medicare Part B — cover oral appliance therapy for diagnosed sleep apnea when provided by a qualified dentist with a physician referral. HSA and FSA funds can also be used. Our team at Best Dental verifies your benefits before beginning treatment.
Do I need a sleep study before getting an oral appliance?
Yes — a formal sleep study (in-lab polysomnography or home sleep apnea test) ordered by a physician is required before any oral appliance can be prescribed. The study establishes your apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), which determines severity and guides treatment selection. You cannot receive an oral appliance based on symptoms alone. Best Dental fabricates the appliance based on the physician's diagnosis and coordinates ongoing care with your sleep medicine provider.
How is an oral appliance different from a nightguard?
A nightguard is designed to protect teeth from grinding (bruxism) and fits passively over the teeth without repositioning the jaw. A sleep apnea oral appliance is specifically engineered to advance the lower jaw forward by a calibrated amount to open the airway — it has an adjustment mechanism and a therapeutic jaw position. While they may look superficially similar, they serve completely different clinical purposes and are not interchangeable.
What if I already have a CPAP but can't use it?
CPAP intolerance is one of the most common reasons patients seek oral appliance therapy. If you have a documented diagnosis and have made a good-faith effort to use CPAP, most insurance plans cover an oral appliance as an alternative. You don't need to give up on sleep apnea treatment because CPAP hasn't worked for you. Call (281) 215-3065 — we can work with your sleep physician and insurance to coordinate the transition.
How long does it take to get used to an oral appliance?
Most patients adapt comfortably within 2–4 weeks. The first few nights may involve mild jaw stiffness or increased salivation, which typically subsides quickly. The titration process — gradually advancing the jaw to the optimal therapeutic position — takes several weeks. Morning jaw exercises (gently moving the jaw side to side before getting up) help minimize stiffness. Most patients find the adjustment period significantly easier than adapting to CPAP.
Who qualifies for oral appliance therapy?
Oral appliance therapy is appropriate for adults with diagnosed mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea (AHI 5–30), adults with severe OSA who are CPAP intolerant, and primary snorers. It is not appropriate for central sleep apnea, patients with fewer than 6–8 teeth per arch, severe uncontrolled periodontal disease, or severe active TMJ disorder. A full dental evaluation and sleep study diagnosis are required before any device is fabricated.

Key Takeaways About Oral Appliance Therapy at Best Dental

FDA-approved treatment for mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea
Custom mandibular advancement device repositions the jaw to keep the airway open
Clinically proven comparable to CPAP for mild to moderate OSA
Accepted alternative for patients who cannot tolerate CPAP
Small, silent, portable — no mask, no machine, no power needed
Requires a physician-ordered sleep study before treatment
Cost $1,800–$3,500 — Medicare and most medical insurance accepted
Custom fabricated in 2–3 weeks; titrated over several weeks for optimal position
Annual monitoring by Dr. Naderi to check teeth, bite, and jaw health
Serves Richmond, Pecan Grove, Aliana, Sugar Land, Katy, and Rosenberg

Ready to Sleep Better in Richmond, TX?

If you've been diagnosed with sleep apnea or suspect you have it, Dr. Jasmine and Dr. Sonny Naderi can evaluate you for oral appliance therapy at Best Dental — 22377 Bellaire Blvd, Suite 400, Richmond, TX 77407.

Dr. Naderi

Author Dr. Naderi

Dr. Sonny Naderi is a fellowship-trained in oral surgery with over 20 years of experience and 25,000+ wisdom teeth extractions. His expertise in surgical dentistry, implants, and complex procedures, combined with a gentle, patient-focused approach, makes him one of Richmond's most trusted dental professionals.

More posts by Dr. Naderi
Close Menu