“I was on CPAP for six years. Compliant every single night. Still woke up exhausted, still snored when the mask leaked, and my wife had moved to the guest room after two. I tried Greemloo Pro mostly out of desperation. By week 4, she was back in our bed. By day 60, my CPAP was in storage. She actually cried the first morning we both woke up feeling rested at the same time. I can’t put a price on that.”
Why I Stopped Prescribing CPAP (And What I Recommend Instead)
I Prescribed CPAP Machines for 20 Years. I Was Wrong About Something Critical.
I need to say something I should have told every single CPAP patient I’ve ever treated. After two decades as a board-certified sleep specialist, I was confident CPAP was the gold standard. I prescribed it without hesitation. I believed it was the best we could offer.
Then I started noticing a pattern. Patients who were fully compliant - wearing their mask every single night - were still calling my office exhausted. Still dragging through their days. Still struggling. And I kept asking myself the same uncomfortable question: Is this really as good as it gets?
It wasn’t until I started digging into the research on neuromuscular therapy that I realized what I had been missing. CPAP was never treating the problem. It was only masking it - night after night, year after year. What I’m about to share changed how I practice medicine permanently.
The CPAP Trap
Here is the hard truth most sleep doctors don’t say out loud: CPAP only works while you’re wearing it. The moment you take it off, your airway collapses exactly as it did the night before you started. After 5 years on CPAP. After 10 years. After 20 years. Nothing has changed inside your airway.
CPAP is an air compressor. It forces pressurized air down your throat to prop your airway open mechanically. It never strengthens a single muscle. It never retrains the tissue. You are not healing - you are being managed. Forever.
The compliance numbers tell the real story. Nearly 50% of CPAP users abandon it within the first year - and the ones who stick with it often wish they hadn’t. Here’s what they tell me in my office:
“After 20 years on CPAP, your airway collapses just as badly the night you stop using it as it did the very first night. You haven’t fixed anything. You’ve just been renting a workaround.”
What Your CPAP Is Actually Doing to Your Sleep
Even when patients use their CPAP perfectly every night, the device creates its own set of problems that compound over time. Most doctors don’t connect the dots - but I started to.
The Real Reason Your Airway Collapses
Sleep apnea is not a pressure deficiency. It is a muscle weakness problem. The muscles surrounding your airway - the genioglossus, the pharyngeal constrictors, the soft palate - lose their tone over time. During sleep, when those muscles relax, the airway collapses inward and cuts off oxygen.
CPAP bypasses those muscles entirely with brute force. Every single night for years. The muscles never get stronger - they actually get weaker from disuse, because the machine is doing all the work. You become more dependent on CPAP, not less.
The real fix - the one I should have been looking for all along - is neuromuscular retraining. Teach the airway muscles to maintain their tone through the night so they never collapse in the first place. That’s not a theory. That’s basic physiology.
Why I Started Recommending Greemloo Pro Instead
When I first heard about Greemloo Pro, I was skeptical. I had been burned by gimmicks before - chin straps, mouth guards, positional pillows. None of them addressed the underlying mechanism. But when I read the clinical research on electrical muscle stimulation for airway retraining, I paid attention.
Greemloo Pro uses precisely calibrated micro-pulses delivered through a small device worn under the chin. These pulses gently stimulate the genioglossus and surrounding airway muscles during sleep. Over 100 nights, the muscles rebuild their tone and learn to stay open without any assistance. It’s not masking the problem - it’s fixing the tissue causing it.
I started cautiously - 50 patients , all of whom had been on CPAP for at least 3 years and were still symptomatic. AHI scores dropped within 2 weeks in the majority of them. By week 8, more than half had stopped using CPAP entirely. I expanded to 400 patients. The results held.
CPAP vs. Greemloo Pro
| Feature | CPAP Machine | Greemloo Pro |
|---|---|---|
|
How you wear it |
Full mask + hose strapped to face every night | Small device worn under chin - barely noticeable |
| Permanent fix? | No - you’re dependent forever | Yes - 95% device-free after 100 days |
| Ongoing cost | $150-$300/year in masks, filters, tubing | $0 after your initial purchase |
| Travel | Separate bag, TSA screening, distilled water required | Pocket-sized, fits in any bag, no hassle |
| Intimacy | Partner reports it kills closeness and connection | Nearly invisible - partner barely notices |
| Noise | Machine hum all night, every night | Completely silent |
|
Compliance rate |
~50% quit within 1 year | Patients actually stick with it - results motivate |
| Guarantee | Varies - often no refund after first use | 100-night full money-back guarantee |
What Happened When 400 CPAP Patients Tried It
The number that surprised me most was not the 93% who stopped needing CPAP. It was the zero patients who wanted to return to it. In 20 years of prescribing CPAP, I never once had a patient tell me they loved their machine. With Greemloo Pro, patients would call to tell me how different mornings felt.
Within the first two weeks, most patients noticed their partner commenting on the change. Partners were sleeping in the same bed again - often for the first time in years. That matters more than any AHI score I’ve ever recorded.
By day 100, the vast majority had permanently put their CPAP machine away. Not as a test. Not as a break. For good. The muscles had been retrained. The airway was staying open on its own. That’s not a temporary fix, that is a cure.
The 100-Day Protocol - 3 Steps
After 100 nights, the airway muscles have been fully retrained. The results are permanent, not contingent on wearing the device forever. Most patients transition off Greemloo Pro by day 90 to 110. The CPAP goes in the closet. And stays there.
From Ex-CPAP Patients
“My doctor called me a ‘model CPAP patient’ because I never missed a night. But I was still dragging myself out of bed every morning, still falling asleep at my desk by 2 PM, still exhausted. A colleague mentioned Greemloo Pro and I was skeptical. I tried everything. Three months later, I wake up and actually feel like I slept. It sounds simple but it’s completely life-changing when you’ve forgotten what rested feels like.”
“I travel for work constantly, 15 to 20 flights a year. Hauling a CPAP through TSA was humiliating every single time. Forgetting distilled water in a hotel at midnight. Explaining my machine to security in three different countries. Greemloo Pro fits in my jacket pocket. That alone would have been worth it. But waking up each morning without a mask on my face, without a machine humming next to me, that still feels surreal after two years of CPAP.”
100-Night Money-Back Guarantee
Before I recommended Greemloo Pro to a single patient, I asked about the guarantee. Because that’s what you do when you’re putting your reputation behind something. Their answer: 100 full nights. If you don’t see results, you get every dollar back. No questions asked. No restocking fee. No hoops to jump through. They send you a label and you ship it back.
I’ve never seen a CPAP manufacturer offer anything close to that. The only real risk is doing nothing staying on a machine that keeps you dependent, keeps you uncomfortable, and keeps you from sleeping the way you deserve to sleep.
Dr. Nathaniel Alderbrook has been a practicing sleep and respiratory specialist for 22 years. He has treated over 8,000 patients with sleep-disordered breathing. He has no financial relationship with Greemloo and receives no compensation for this article. He recommends Greemloo Pro based solely on the clinical results he has observed in his patients.