“…In patients with OSA, increased drive during sleep is a physiological response to increased upper airway resistance 7 12. As for patients with overlap syndrome, the data of He et al 7 suggest that the COPD-associated decrease in drive is cancelled out by the OSA-associated increase in it 7. The result is that in patients with overlap syndrome, neural drive during sleep is as high as that recorded during sleep in OSA, yet of the same magnitude recorded during wakefulness in COPD 7.…”