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ApexRespiratory

Chart — Sleep Medicine

CPAP vs BiPAP vs APAP

All three positive airway pressure (PAP) modalities keep the upper airway open by splinting it with pressurized gas. The key difference is that only BiPAP adds pressure support to augment ventilation, and only APAP auto-adjusts its pressure throughout the night. Use this chart to match the right PAP mode to the patient’s diagnosis and clinical needs.

Written by Apex Respiratory Editorial Team

Educational use only. This material supports respiratory therapy education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional protocols, or physician orders. Always follow facility policies and current provider orders, and verify calculations independently before clinical use.

Overview

CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure), APAP (auto-titrating PAP), and BiPAP (bilevel positive airway pressure) are the three primary home PAP modalities for sleep-disordered breathing. CPAP delivers one fixed pressure, making it the simplest and most-studied first-line therapy for moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). APAP varies its output automatically within a clinician-set range, which can be useful when a single optimal pressure has not yet been established. BiPAP cycles between a higher inspiratory pressure (IPAP) and a lower expiratory pressure (EPAP), providing pressure support that offloads the respiratory muscles — the only PAP mode that actively assists ventilation and can address CO₂ retention.

Feature Comparison

Comparison of CPAP, APAP, and BiPAP by pressure profile, pressure support, typical pressures, indications, and limitations
FeatureCPAPAPAPBiPAP
Pressure profileOne fixed pressure throughout the cycleAuto-varies within a set rangeSeparate IPAP (higher) and EPAP (lower)
Pressure support?NoneNoneYes (IPAP − EPAP)
Typical pressures4–20 cm H₂O4–20 cm H₂O rangeIPAP up to ~25–30 cm H₂O; EPAP ≥ 4 cm H₂O; differential ≥ 4 cm H₂O
Treats hypoventilation?NoNoYes
Backup rate option?NoNoYes (BiPAP-ST)
Primary indicationObstructive sleep apnea (first-line, moderate–severe)OSA with variable pressure needs / home auto-titrationCPAP intolerance, high pressures, or hypoventilation (OHS, neuromuscular, COPD–OSA overlap)
Common use caseFirst-line moderate–severe OSAUndetermined single titration pressurePersistent events at high CPAP, aerophagia, or CO₂ retention
Main limitationNo ventilatory assist; aerophagia at high pressureNot for hypoventilationMore complex titration

All three modalities keep the airway open with positive pressure; only BiPAP adds pressure support to augment ventilation, and only APAP auto-adjusts throughout the night. Pressure ranges are typical home PAP ranges for sleep-disordered breathing — not acute hospital NIV settings.

Related Resources

Sources

  1. Kacmarek RM, Stoller JK, Heuer AJ. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care. 12th ed. Elsevier; 2021.
  2. Patil SP, Ayappa IA, Caples SM, et al. Treatment of adult obstructive sleep apnea with positive airway pressure: an American Academy of Sleep Medicine clinical practice guideline. J Clin Sleep Med. 2019;15(2):335-343.
  3. Kushida CA, Chediak A, Berry RB, et al. Clinical guidelines for the manual titration of positive airway pressure in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. J Clin Sleep Med. 2008;4(2):157-171.