Sleep apnea and back pain are commonly experienced together. Although medical experts don’t believe that one condition causes the other, the two health issues are found as co-symptoms often enough that the relationship between back pain and sleep apnea deserves to be explored.
Sleep apnea isn’t believed to specifically cause back pain. All the same, if you have problems with back pain, not getting enough sleep could make your condition even more painful, as some studies have pointed out.
The journal Sleep concluded in 2006 that “the loss of 4 hours of sleep and specific REM sleep loss are hyperalgesic the following day.”1 (Wait, hyper-what? Merriam-Webster defines hyperalgesic as “increased sensitivity to pain or enhanced intensity of pain sensation.”) So, untreated sleep apnea can make any back pain you experience more, well, painful.