Start with symptoms and risk factors
Snoring, witnessed pauses, morning headaches, daytime sleepiness, and oxygen trend concerns are reasons to ask a clinician about testing.
Learn how home sleep testing pathways may work, what to ask a provider, and where Apneatronics can route users before prescription equipment decisions.
Apneatronics can capture high-intent testing and provider questions without claiming to diagnose, treat, prescribe, or replace clinical care.
A low-friction lead form for compatibility, replacement timing, and product-path questions.
ContinueHelp users prepare for local sleep study, home test, and follow-up questions.
ContinueA provider-first pathway for learning how home testing may work and when to ask for help.
ContinueClear guardrails around machines, masks, prescription products, and accessory-only shopping.
ContinueSnoring, witnessed pauses, morning headaches, daytime sleepiness, and oxygen trend concerns are reasons to ask a clinician about testing.
Home sleep tests may be useful for some people, but a provider should decide whether at-home or in-lab testing is the better path.
Sleep data needs clinical interpretation. Apneatronics should not diagnose sleep apnea or recommend pressure settings.
Prescription machines, settings, and ongoing therapy decisions should come after provider-directed evaluation.
| Layer | Purpose | Apneatronics boundary |
|---|---|---|
| Education | Explain symptoms, testing options, and questions to ask. | Informational only, with medical disclaimers. |
| Lead capture | Collect compatibility, testing, clinic, and provider-conversation questions. | Do not collect unnecessary medical details unless a compliant workflow exists. |
| Partner handoff | Route users to licensed sleep testing, DME, or clinical partners. | Keep the partner responsible for clinical decisions and regulated fulfillment. |
| Equipment shopping | Support accessories, replacement supplies, and product research. | Keep prescription machines informational until a licensed process is live. |
Tell us what you are comparing. We can point you to relevant Apneatronics guides, Amazon shopping pages, or clinic and testing resources without making diagnosis or treatment claims.
Plain-English questions to ask before and after a provider-directed home sleep test.
Open guideWhat to ask when reviewing results, next steps, and equipment discussions.
Open guideMove into non-prescription replacement and comfort products when you know what fits.
Open guideFor persistent symptoms, breathing concerns, or possible sleep apnea, talk to a healthcare provider. If you are ready to compare accessories only, start with the store.